CHALLENGE ME WITH MONSTERS!
"From between the two shuffling dancers
padded something on four feet. The canine-feline creature was more than just a
head; it was a loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in length, and the
red eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a killer . . . Words issued from
between those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand . . .
"Dane
slid his blade out surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand
and jabbing painfully; but the terrible creature continued to advance . . .
There was no blurring of its lines . . ."
Dane
Thorson of the space-ship Solar Queen knew
there was only one way to win out over this hideous thing—a battle to the end
between his rational mind and the hypnotic witchcraft of Lumbrilo,
the mental wizard of the planet Khatka.
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Dane Thorson
He wanted
to spend
a short
vacation on Khatka, not
the rest of his
life.
Medic Tau
Was he physician or magician—or a little bit of
both?
Chief Ranger Asaki
Tracking the
forests had taught him that
mad animals
—whether real or imaginary—were
to be
feared.
Captain Jellico
Would his knowledge of alien life-forms
help him in his fight against
alien ghosts?
Nymani
Not even
this pilot's most scientific skill could overcome a
voodoo charm's ground-drag.
Lumbrilo
On his
own planet
he was
a witch
doctor; on Earth he'd have been
a master
politician.
VOODOO PLANET
by
ANDREW NORTH
ACE BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street,
New York 36, N. Y.
voodoo planet
Copyright ©, 1959, by Ace Books, Inc.
All Bights
Reserved
plague ship
Copyright ©,
1956, by Andrew North
Printed in U. S. A.
Talk of heat—or better not—on Xecho.
This water-logged world combined all the most unattractive features of a steam bath and one could only dream of coolness, greenness—more land than
a stingy string of islands.
The
young man on the promontory above the crash of the waves wore the winged cap of
a spaceman with the insignia of a cargo-master and not much else, save a pair of very short shorts. He wiped one hand absently across his bare
chest and brought it away damp as he studied, through protective sun goggles,
the treacherous promise of the bright sea. One could swim—if he wanted to lose most of his skin. There were minute organisms
in that liquid that smacked their lips—if they had lips—every time they thought
of a
Terran.
Dane
Thorson licked his own lips, tasting salt, and plodded
back through the sand of the spaceport to the berth
of the Solar Queen.
This had been a long day, and
one with more snarl-ups than he cared to count, keeping him on a constant,
dogged trot between the ship and the fitting yard where riggers labored with
the slowest motions possible to the human body—or so it seemed to the exasperated
acting-Cargo-Master of the Free Trader. Captain Jellico had long ago taken
refuge in his cabin to preserve the remnants of his temper. Dane had been allowed
no such escape.
The Queen had a schedule for refitting to serve as a mail ship, and that time allowance
did not allow for humidity playing the devil with the innards of robot fitters.
She had to be ready to lift when the Combine ship now
plying that run set down and formally signed off in her favor. Luckily, most of
the work was done and Dane had given a last searching inspection before signing
the rigger's book and reporting to his captain.
The air-conditioned
interior of the Queen
comforted him as he climbed
to his quarters. Ship air was flat, chemically pure but unappetizing stuff. Today
it was a relief to breath. Dane went on to the bather. At least there was no lack
of water—with the local skinners filtered out. It was chill but relaxing on his
gaunt young body.
He was
sealing on his lightest tunic when the ramp buzzer sounded. A visitor—oh, not
the supervisor-rigger again! Dane went to answer with dragging feet. For the crew of the Queen at the moment numbered exactly four, with himself for
general errand boy. Captain Jellico was in his quarters
two levels above, Medic Tau was presumably overhauling his supplies, and Sindbad, ship's cat, asleep in some empty cabin.
Dane
jerked his tunic into place, very much an his guard as
he came to the head of the ramp. But it was not the supervisor-rigger. Dane,
thoroughly used to unusual-appearing strangers, both human and alien, was
impressed by this visitor.
He was tall, this quiet man, his great height
accented by a fit
leanness, a narrowness
of waist and hip, a length of leg and arm. His main article of clothing was the
universal shorts of the Xecho setder.
But, being fashioned of saffron yellow, they were the more brilliant because of
his darkness of skin. For he was not the warm brown of the Terran
Negroes Dane had served beside, though he shared their general features. His
flesh was really black, black with an almost bluish sheen. Instead of shirt or
tunic, his deep chest was crossed by two wide straps, the big medallion marking
their intersection giving forth flashes of gem fire when he breathed. He wore at
his belt not the standard stun gun of a spaceman, but a weapon which resembled the more deadly Patrol blaster, as well as a long knife housed in a jeweled
and fringed sheath.
To
the eye he was an example of barbaric force tamed and trimmed to civilized
efficiency.
He saluted,
palm out, and spoke Galactic Basic with only a suggestion of accent.
"I am Kort Asaki. I believe Captain
Jellico expects me."
"Yes.
sir!" Dane snapped to attention. So this was the
Chief Ranger from fabulous Khatka, Xecho's sister planet.
The
other ascended the cat ladder easily, missing no detail
of the ship's interior as he passed. His expression was still one of polite
interest as his guide rapped on the panel door of Jellico's cabin. And a
horrible screech from Queex, the captain's pet hoobat, drowned out any immediate answer. Then followed that
automatic thump on the floor of the blue-feathered, crab-parrot-toad's cage, announcing
that its master was in residence.
Since
the captain's cordial welcome extended only to his guest, Dane regretfully
descended to the mess cabin to make unskilled preparations for supper—though
there was not much you could do to foul up concentrates in an automatic cooker.
"Company?" Tau sat beyond the cooking unit nursing a mug of Terran
coffee. "And do you have to
serve music with the meals, especially that particular selection?"
Dane
flushed, stopped whistling in mid-note. "Terran
Bound" was old and pretty well worn out; he didn't know
why he always unconsciously soimded off with that.
"A
Chief Ranger from Khatka just came on board," he
reported, carefully offhand, as he busied himself reading labels. He knew
better than to serve fish or any of its derivatives in disguise again.
"Khatkal"
Tau sat up straighter. "Now there's a planet worth visiting;"
"Not on a Free Trader's pay,"
commented Dane.
"You
can always hope to make a big strike, boy. But what I wouldn't give to lift ship for therel"
"Why?
You're no hunter. How come you want to heat jets for that port?"
"Oh,
I don't care about the game preserves, though they're worth seeing, too. It's
the people themselves—"
"But
they're Terran settlers, or at least from Terran stock, aren't they?"
"Sure,"
Tau sipped his coffee slowly. "But there are settlers and settlers, son. And
a lot depends upon when they left Terran and why, and
who they were—also what happened to them after they landed out here."
"And Khatkans are
really special?"
"Well,
they have an amazing history. The colony was founded by escaped prisoners—and
just one racial stock. They took off from Earth close to the end of the Second Atomic
War. That was a race war, remember? Which made it doubly
ugly." Tau's mouth twisted in disgust. "As if the color of a man's skin makes any difference in what
lies under it! One side in that line-up tried to take over Africa—herded
most of the natives into a giant concentration camp and practiced genocide on a
grand scale. Then they were cracked themselves, hard and heavy. During the
confusion some survivors in the camp staged a revolt, helped by the enemy. They
captured an experimental station hidden in the center of the camp and made a
break into space in two ships which had been built there. That voyage must have
been a nightmare, but they were desperate. Somehow they made it out here to
the rim and set down on Khatka without power enough
to take off again—and by then most of them were dead.
"But
we humans, no matter what our race, are a tough breed. The refugees discovered
that climatically their new world was not too different from Africa, a lucky chance
which might happen only once in a thousand times. So they thrived, the handful
who survived. But the white technicians they had kidnaped
to run the ships didn't. For they set up a color bar in
reverse. The lighter your skin, the lower you were in the social scale.
By that kind of selective breeding the present Khatkans
are very dark indeed.
"They reverted to the primitive for
survival. Then, about two hundred years ago, long before the first Survey Scout
discovered them, something happened. Either the parent race mutated, or, as
sometimes occurs, a line of people of superior gifts emerged—not in a few isolated
births, but with surprising regularity in five family clans. There was a short
period of power struggle until they realized the foolishness of civil war and
formed an oligarchy, heading a loose tribal organization. With the Five Families
to push and lead, a new civilization developed, and when Survey came to call
they were no longer savages. Combine bought the trade rights about seventy-five
years ago. Then the Company and the Five Families got together and marketed a
luxury item to the galaxy. You know how every super-jet big shot on twenty-five
planets wants to say he's hunted on Khatka. And if he
can point out a qraz head on his wall, or wear a tail
bracelet, he's able to strut with the best. To holiday on Khatka
is both fabulous and fashionable—and very, very profitable for the natives and
for Combine who sells transportation to the travelers."
"I hear they have poachers,
too," Dane remarked.
"Yes,
that naturally follows. You know what a glam skin brings on the market.
Wherever you have a rigidly controlled export you're going to have poachers and
smugglers. But the Patrol doesn't go to Khatka. The natives
handle their own criminals. Personally, I'd cheerfully take a ninety-nine-year
sentence in the Lunar mines in place of what the Khatkans dish out to a poacher they net!"
"So that rumor has
spread satisfactorily!"
Coffee
slopped over the brim of Tau's mug and Dane dropped
the packet of steak concentrate he was about to feed into the cooker. Chief Ranger
Asaki loomed in the doorway of the mess as suddenly as
if he had been telaported to that point.
The medic arose to his feet and smiled
politely at the visitor.
"Do I detect in that observation, sir,
the suggestion that the tales I have heard were deliberately set to blast where
they would do the most good as deterrents?"
A
fleeting grin broke the impassive sombemess of the black
face.
"I
was informed you are a man skilled in 'magic,' Medic. You certainly display the
traditional sorcerer's quickness of wit But this rumor
is also truth." The quirk of good humor had gone again, and there was an
edge in the Chief Ranger's voice which cut. "Poachers on Khatka would welcome the Patrol in place of the attention
they now receive."
He came
into the mess cabin, Jellico behind him, and Dane pulled down two of the snap
seats. He was holding a mug under the spout of the coffee dispenser as the captain
made introductions.
"Thorson—our
acting-cargo-master."
"Thorson,"
the Khatkan acknowledged with a grave nod of his head,
and then glanced down to floor level with a look of surprise. Weaving a pattern
about his legs, purring loudly, Sindbad was offering an
unusually fervent welcome of his own. The Ranger went down on one knee, his hand
out for Sindbad's inquiring sniff. Then the cat
butted that dark palm, batted at it playfully with claw-sheathed paw.
"A Terran
cat I It is of the lion family?"
"Far
removed," Jellico supplied. "You'd have to add a lot of bulk to Sinbad to promote him to the
lion class."
"We
have only the old tales." Asaki sounded almost
wistful as the cat jumped to his knee and clawed for a hold on his chest
belts. "But I do not believe that lions were ever so friendly toward my ancestors."
Dane
would have removed the cat, but the Khatkan arose
with Sindbad, still purring loudly, resting in the
crook of his arm. The Ranger was smiling with a gentleness which changed the whole arrogant cast of his countenance.
"Do
not bring this one to Khatka with you, Captain, or
you will never take him away again. Those who dwell in the inner courts would
not let him vanish from their sight. Ah, so this pleases you, small lion?"
He rubbed Sindbad gendy
under the throat and the cat stretched his neck, his yellow eyes half closed in
bliss.
"Thorson,"
the Captain turned to Dane, "that arrival report on my desk was the final
one from Combine?"
"Yes, sir. There's no hope of the Rover setting
down here before that date."
Asaki sat down, still holding the cat. "So
you see, Captain, fortune has arranged it all. You have two tens of days. Four
days to go in my cruiser, four days for your return here, and the rest to
explore the preserve. We could not ask for better luck, for I do not know when
our paths may cross again. In the normal course of events I will not have another
mission to Xecho for a year, perhaps longer. Also—"
He hesitated and then spoke to Tau. "Medic, Captain Jellico has informed
me that you have made a study
of magic on many worlds."
"That is so,
sir."
"Do
you then believe that it is real force, or that it is only a supersition for child-people who set up demons to howl
petitions to when some darkness falls upon them?"
"Some
of the magic I have seen is trickery, some of it founded upon an inner
knowledge of men and their ways which a shrewd witch doctor can use to his advantage.
There always remains" —Tau put down his mug, "—there always remains a small residue of happenings and results for which we have not yet found any
logical explanations—"
"And
I believe," Asaki interrupted, "it is also
true that a race can be conditioned from birth to be sensitive to forms of magic so
that men of that blood are particularly susceptible." That was more of a statement than a question,
but Tau answered it.
"That is very true. A Lamorian, for example, can be 'sung' to death. I have
witnessed such a case.
But upon a Terran or another
off-world man the same suggestion would have no effect."
"Those
who settled Khatka brought such magic with
them." The Chief Ranger's fingers still moved about Sindbad's
jaw and throat soothingly, but his tone was chill, the coldest thing in the cramped
space of the mess cabin.
"Yes, a highly developed form of
it," Tau agreed.
"More
highly developed perhaps than even you can believe, Medic!" That came in a hiss of cold rage. "I think that its
present manifestation—death by a beast that is not a beast-could be worth your
detailed study."
"Why?" Tau came blundy to the point.
"Because
it is a killing magic and it is being carefully used to rid my world of key
men, men we need badly. If there is a weak point in this cloudy attack shaping against
us, we must leam it, and soon!"
It was
Jellico who added the rest. "We are invited to visit Khatka
and survey a new
hunting range as Chief Ranger Asaki's personal term
guests."
Dane
drew a deep breath of wonder. Guest rights on Khatka
were jealously guarded—they were too valuable to their owners to waste. Whole families
lived on the income from the yearly rental of even half a one. But the Rangers,
by right of office, had several which they could grant to visiting scientists
or men from other worlds holding positions similar to their own. To have such an
opportunity offered to an ordinary Trader was almost incredible.
His
wonder was matched by Tau's and must have been plain
to read for the Chief Ranger smiled.
"For
a long time Captain Jellico and I have exchanged biological data on alien
life-forms—his skill in photographing such, his knowledge as an
xenobiologist are widely recognized. And so I have
permission for him to visit the new Zoboru preserve,
not yet officially opened. And you, Medic Tau, your help, or at least your diagnosis,
we need in another direction. So, one expert comes openly, another not so
openly. Though, Medic, your task is approved by my superiors. And" —he glanced
at Dane— "perhaps to muddle the trail for the suspicious, shall we not ask
this young man also?"
Dane's eyes went to the captain. Jellico was always
fair and his crew would have snapped into action on his word alone—even if they
were fronting a rain of Thorkian death darts and that
order was to advance. But, on the other hand, Dane would never have asked a favor,
and the best he hoped for was to be able to perform his duties without unfavorable
comment upon their commission. He had no reason to believe Jellico was willing
to agree to this.
"You
have two weeks' planet-side leave coming, Thorson. If you want to spend it on Khatka . . ." Jellico actually grinned then. "I take
it that you do. When do we up-ship, sir?"
"You
said that you must wait for the return of your other crew members—shall we say
mid-afternoon tomorrow?" The Chief Ranger stood up and put Sindbad down though the cat protested with several sharp
meows.
"Small
lion," the tall Khatkan spoke to the cat as to an
equal, "this is your jungle, and mine lies elsewhere. But should you ever
grow tired of traveling the stars, there is always a
home for you in my courts."
When the Chief Ranger went out the door, Sindbad did not try to follow, but he uttered one mournful
little cry of protest and loss.
"So
he wants a trouble shooter, does he?" Tau asked. "All right, 111 try
to hunt out his goblins for him; it'll be worth that to visit Khatka!"
Dane,
remembering the hot glare of the Xecho spaceport, the
sea one could not swim in, .contrasted that with the tri-dees
he had seen of the green hunters' paradise on the next planet of the system.
"Yes, sir!" he echoed and made a haphazard choice for the cooker.
"Don't be too lighthearted,"
Tau warned. "Ill say that any
stew which was too hot for that Ranger to handle
might give us burned fingers—and quick. When we land on Khatka,
walk softly and look over your shoulder, and be prepared
for the worst."
Lightning played along the black ridges above them, and below
was a sheer drop to a river which was only a silver thread. Under their boots,
man-made and yet dominating the wildness of jungle and mountain, was a platform
of rock slabs, fused to support a palace of towering yellow-white walls and
curved cups of domes, a palace which was also half fortress, half frontier
post.
Dane
set his hands on the parapet of the river drop, blinked as a lightning bolt crackled
in a sky-splitting glare of violet fire. This was about as far from the steaming
islands of Xecho as a man could imagine.
"The
demon graz prepare for battle." Asald nodded toward the distant crackling.
Captain
Jellico laughed. "Supposed to be whetting their tusks, eh? I wouldn't care
to meet a graz that could
produce such a display by mere tusk whetting."
"No?
But think of the reward for the tracker who discovers where such go to die. To
find the graveyard of the graz
herds would make any man wealthy beyond dreams."
"How much truth is
there in that legend?" Tau asked.
The
Chief Ranger shrugged. "Who can say? This much is true: I have served my life in the forests since I could walk. I have
listened to the talk of Trackers, Hunters, Rangers in my father's courtyards and
field camps since I could understand their words. Yet never has any man
reported the finding of a body of a graz
that died a natural death. The scavengers might well account for the bulk of
flesh, but the tusks and the bones should be visible for years. And this, too,
I have seen with my own eyes: a graz
close to death, supported by two of its kind and being urged along to the big
swamps. Perhaps it is only that the suffering animal longs for water at its
end, or perhaps in the heart of that morass there does lie
the graz graveyard. But no man has found a naturally
dead graz, nor has any
returned from exploring the big swamps . . . ."
Lightning
on peaks which were like polished jet—bare rock above, the lush overgrowth of
jungle below. And between, this fortress held by men who dared both the heights
and the depths. The wildly burgeoning life of Khatka
had surrounded the off-worlders since they had come
here. There was something untameable about Khatka; the lush planet lured and yet repelled at the same
time.
"Zoboru far from here?"
The
Chief Ranger pointed north in answer to the captain's question.
"About a hundred leagues. It is the first new preserve we have prepared
in ten years. And it is our desire to make it the best for tri-dee hunters. That is why we are now operating taming teams—"
"Taming teams?" Dane had to ask.
The Chief Ranger was ready
enough to discuss his project.
"Zoboru is a no-kill preserve. The animals, they come to leam that after a while. But we cannot wait several years
until they do. So we make them gifts." He laughed, evidendy
recalling some incident. "Sometimes, perhaps, we are too eager. Most of
our visitors who wish to make tri-dees want to
picture big game—graz, amplet, rock apes, lions—"
"Lions?" echoed Dane.
"Not Terran
lions, no. But my people, when they landed on Khatka,
found a few animals that reminded them of those they had always known. So they
gave those the same names. A Khatkan lion is furred,
it is a hunter and a great fighter, but it is not the cat of Terra. However, it
is in great demand as a tri-dee actor. So we summon
it out of lurking by providing free meals. One shoots a poli,
a water rat, or a lan-deer and drags the carcass
behind a low-flying flitter. The lion springs upon the moving meat, which it can
also scent, and the rope is cut, leaving a free dinner.
"The
lions are not stupid. In a very short time they connect the sound of a flitter
cutting the air with food. So they come to the banquet and those on the flitter
can take their tri-dee shots at ease. Only there must
also be care taken in such training. One forest guard on the Komog preserve became too enterprising.
He dragged his loll at first. Then, to see if he could get the lions to forget
man's presence entirely, he hung the burning carcasses on the flitter, encouraging them to jump for their food.
"For
the guard that was safe enough, but it worked too too
well. A month or so later a Hunter was escorting a client through Komog and they swung low to get a good picture of a water rat
emerging from the river. Suddenly there was a snarl behind them and they found
themselves sharing the flitter with a lioness annoyed at finding no meat waiting
on board.
"Luckily,
they both wore stass belts; but they had to land the
flitter and leave until the lioness wandered off, and she seriously damaged the
machine in her irritation. So now our guards play no more fancy tricks while on
taming runs. Tomorrow—no," he corrected himself, "the day after tomorrow
I will be able to show you how the process works."
"And tomorrow?"
inquired the captain.
"Tomorrow
my men make hunting magic." Asaki's voice was
expressionless.
"Your chief witch
doctor being?" questioned Tau.
"Lumbrilo." The Chief Ranger did not appear disposed to add
to that but Tau pursued the subject.
"His office is hereditary?"
"Yes. Does that make any
difference?" For the first time there was a current of repressed eagerness
in the other's tone.
"Perhaps a vast amount of
difference," Tau replied. "A hereditary office may carry with it two
forms of conditioning, one to influence its holder, one to affect the public-at-large.
Your Lumbrilo may have come to believe deeply in his
own powers; he would be a very remarkble man if he
did not. It is almost certain that your people unquestionably accept him as a
worker of wonders?"
"They
do so accept," Once more Asaki's voice was drained
of life.
"And
Lumbrilo does not accept something you believe necessary?"
"Again the truth, Medic. Lumbrilo does not accept
bis proper place in the scheme of things!"
"He is a member of one
of your Five Families?"
"No,
his clan is small, always set apart. From the beginning here, those who spoke
for gods and demons did not also order men."
"Separation
of church and state," commented Tau thoughtfully. "Yet in our Terran past there have been times when church and state
were one. Does Lumbrilo desire that?"
Asaki raised his eyes to the mountain peaks, to
the northward where lay his beloved work.
"I
do not know what Lumbrilo wants, save that it makes
mischief—or worse! This I tell you: hunting magic is part of our lives and it has
at its core some of those unexplainable happenings which you have acknowledged
do exist. I have used powers I can neither explain nor understand as part of my
work. In the jungle and on the grasslands an off-world er
must guard his life with a stass belt if he goes unarmed.
But I—any of my men—can walk unharmed if we obey the rules of our magic. Only Lumbrilo does other things which his forefathers did not. And
he boasts that he can do more. So he has a growing following of those who
believe—and those who fear."
"You want me to face him?"
The
Chief Ranger's big hands closed upon the rim of the parapet as if they could
exert enough pressure to crumble the hard stone. "I want you to see
whether there is trickery in this. Trickery I can fight, for that there are weapons.
But if Lumbrilo truly controls forces for which there
is no name, then perhaps we must patch up an uneasy peace—or go down in defeat.
And, off-worlder, I come from a line of warriors—we
do not drink defeat easily!"
"That
I also believe," Tau returned quietly. "Be sure, sir, if there is
trickery in this man's magic and I can detect it, the secret shall be
yours."
"Let us hope that so
it shall be."
Subconsciously,
Dane had always associated the practice of magic with darkness and the night.
But the next morning the sun was high and hot when he made one of the party
coming down to a second and larger walled terrace where the Hunters, Trackers,
Guards and other followers of the Chief Ranger was assembled in irregular rows.
There
was a low sound which was more a throb in the clear air about them, getting
into a man's blood and pumping in rhythm there. Dane tracked the sound to its
source: four large drums standing waist high before the men who tapped them
delicately with the tips of all ten fingers.
The
necklaces of claws and teeth about those dusky throats, the kilts of fringed
hide, the crossed belts of bril-liandy spotted or
striped fur were in contrast to the very efficient and modern side arms each man
wore, to the rest of the equipment sheathed and strapped at their belts.
There
was a carved stool for the Chief Ranger, another for Captain Jellico. Dane and
Tau settled themselves on the less comfortable seats of the terrace steps.
Those tapping fingers increased their rate of beat, and the notes of the drums
rose from the low murmur of hived bees to the mutter of mountain thunder still
half a range away. A bird called from those inner courts of the palace from
which the women never ventured.
Da—da—da—da . . . Voices took up the thud-thud of the
drums, the heads of the squatting men moved in a slow swing from side to side. Tau's hand closed about Dane's wrist and the younger man
looked around, startled, to see that the medic's eyes were alight, that he was
watching the assembly with the alertness of Sindbad approaching prey.
"Calculate
the stowage space in Number One holdl" That amazing
ordeT, delivered in a whisper, shocked Dane into obeying it. Number One hold .
. . there were three divisions now and the stowage was—He became aware that for
a small space of time he had escaped the jiet being woven by the beat of the drum, the drone of voices, the nodding of
heads. He moistened his lips. So that was how it workedl
He had heard Tau speak often enough about self-hypnotism under such conditions,
but this was the first time the meaning of it had been clear.
Two
men were shuffling out of nowhere, wearing nothing on their dark bodies but calf-length
kilts of tails, black tails with fluffy white tips, which swayed uniformly in
time to their pacing feet. Their heads and shoulders were masked by beautifully
cured and semi-mounted animal heads displaying half-open jaws with double pairs
of curved fangs. The black-and-white striped fur, the sharply pointed ears,
were neither canine nor feline, but a weird combination of the two.
Dane
gabbled two trading formulas under his breath and tried to think of the relation
of Samantme rock coinage to galactic credits. Only
this time his defenses did not work. From between the two shuffling dancers padded
something on four feet. The ranine-feline creature was
more than just a head; it was a loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in
length, and the red eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a confident
killer. It walked without restraint, lazily, with arrogance, its white-tufted tail
swinging. And when it reached the mid-point of the terrace, it flung up its head as if to challenge. But words issued from between
those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand but which undoubtedly
held meaning for the men nodding in time to the hypnotic cadence of that da—da—da . . .
"Beautiful!" Tau spoke in honest admiration,
his own eyes almost as feral as those of the talking beast as he leaned forward,
his fists on his knees.
Now
the animal was dancing also, its paws following the pace set by the masked attendants.
It must be a man in an animal skin. But Dane could hardly believe that. The
illusion was too perfect. His own hands went to the knife sheath at his belt.
Out of deference to local custom they had left their stun rods in the palace,
but a belt knife was an accepted article of apparel. Dane slid the blade out
surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand and jabbing painfully.
This was another of Tau's answers for breaking a
spell. But the white and black creature continued to dance; there was no
blurring of its body lines into those of a human being.
It sang
on in a high-pitched voice, and Dane noted that those of the audience nearest
the stools where Asaki and the captain were seated
now watched the Chief Ranger and the space officer. He felt Tau tense beside
him.
"Trouble
coming . . ." The warning from Tau was the merest thread of sound. Dane
forced himself to look away from the swaying cat-dog, to watch instead the
singers who were now furtively eying their lord and his guest. The Terran knew that there were feudal bonds between the Ranger
and his men. But suppose this was a showdown between Lumbrilo
and Asaki—whose side would these men take?
He watched Captain Jellico's hand slide across
his knee, his fingers drop in touching distance of knife hilt. And the hand of
the Chief Ranger, hanging lax at his side, suddenly balled into a fist.
"So!"
Tau expelled the word as a hiss. He moved with surefooted speed. Now he passed
between the stools to confront the dancing cat-dog. Yet he did not look at that
weird creature and its attendants. Instead his arms were flung high as if to ward
off—or perhaps welcome—something on the mountain side as he shouted: "Hodi, eldama! Hodil" -
As
one, those on the terrace turned, looked up toward the slope. Dane was on his
feet, holding his knife as he might a sword. Though of what use its puny length would be against that huge
bulk moving in slow majesty toward them, he did not try to think.
Gray-dark
trunk curled upward between great ivory tusks, ears went wide as ponderous feet
crunched volcanic soil. Tau moved forward, his hands still upraised, clearly in
greeting. That trunk touched skyward as if in salute to the man who could be
crushed under one foot.
"Hodi, eldama!" For the second time Tau hailed the monster elephant and the trunk raised in silent greeting from one lord of an earth to another
he recognized as an equal. Perhaps it had been a thousand years since man and
elephant had stood so, and then there had been only war and death between them.
Now there was peace and a current of power flowing from one to the other. Dane
sensed this, saw the men on the terrace likewise drawing back from the unseen
tie between the medic and the bull he had so clearly summoned.
Then
Tau's upheld hands came together in a sharp clap and
men held their breath in wonder. Where the great bull had stood there was
nothing—except rocks in the sun.
As Tau
swung around to face the cat-dog, that creature had no substance either. For he fronted no animal but a man, a small,
lean man whose hps wrinkled back from his teeth in a snarl.
His attendant priests fell back, leaving the spaceman and the witch doctor alone.
"Lumbrilo's magic is great," Tau said evenly. "I hail
Lum-brilo of Khatka."
His hand made the open-palmed salute of peace.
The snarl faded as the man brought his face
under control. He stood naked, but he was clothed in inherit dignity. And there
was power with that dignity, power and a pride
before
which even the more physically impressive Chief Ranger
might have to give place.
"You
have magic also, outlander," he replied. "Where walks this
long-toothed shadow of yours now?"
"Where once the men of Khatka walked, Lumbrilo. For it was men of your blood who long, long past
hunted this shadow of mine and made its body their prey."
"So that it now might have a blood debt to
settle with us, outlander?"
"That
you said, not I, man of power. You have shown us one beast, I have shown another.
Who can say which of them is stronger when it issues forth from the shadows?"
Lumbrilo pattered forward, his bare feet making littie sound on the stones of the terrace. Now he was only an
arm's-length away from the medic.
"You
have challenged me, off-world man." Was that a question or a statement? Dane
wondered.
"Why
should I challenge you, Lumbrilo? To each race its
own magic. I come not to offer battle." His eyes held steady with the Khatkan's.
"You
have challenged me." Lumbrilo turned away and
then looked back over his shoulder. "The strength you depend upon may
become a broken staff, off-worlder. Remember my words
in the time when shadows become substance, and substance the thinnest of shadows
1"
m
"You
are truly a man of power!"
Tau shook his head in answer to that outburst from Asaki.
"Not so, sir. Your Lumbrilo is a
man of power. I drew upon his power and you saw the results."
"Deny it not! What we
saw never walked this world."
Tau slung the strap of a trail bag over his
shoulder. "Sir, once men of your blood, men who bred your race, hunted the
elephant. They took his tusks for their treasure, feasted upon his flesh—yes, and
died beneath the trampling of his feet when they were unlucky or unwary. So
there is that within you which can even now be awakened to remember eldama in his might when he was king of the herd and need fear nothing save the
spears and cunning of small, weak men. Lumbrilo had already
awakened your minds to see what he willed you to see."
"How does he do this?" asked the
other simply. "Is it magic that we see not Lumbrilo
but a lion before us?"
"He waves his spell with the drums, with
the chant, by the suggestion his mind imposes upon yours. And, having woven his
spell, he cannot limit it to just the picture he suggests if ancient racial
memories raise another. I merely used the* tools of Lumbrilo
to show you yet another picture your people once knew well."
"And in so doing made an enemy." Asald stood before
a rack of very modem weapons. Now he made his
selection, a silver tube with a stock curved to fit a man's shoulder. "Lumbrilo will not forget."
Tau laughed shortly. "No, but then I have merely done as you wished, have
I not, sir? I have focused on myself the enmity of a dangerous man, and now you
hope I shall be forced, in self-defense, to remove him from your path."
The Khatkan turned slowly, resting the weapon across his forearm.
"I do not deny that, spaceman."
"Then matters here are
indeed serious—"
"They are so serious," Asaki interrupted, speaking not only to Tau but to the
other off-worlders as well, "that what happens
now may mean the end of the Khatka that I know. Lumbrilo is the most dangerous game I have faced in a lifetime
as a hunter. He goes, or we draw his fangs—or else all that I am, all I have labored
here to build, will be swept away. To preserve this I will use any weapon."
"And I am now your weapon, which you
hope will be as successful as that needier you are carrying." Tau laughed again,
without much humor. "Let us hope I shall prove as effective."
TeUico moved out of the shadows. It was just after
dawn, and the grayness of the vanishing night still held in the corners of the
armory. Deliberately he took his own stand before the arms racks and chose a
short-barreled blaster. Only when its butt was cupped in his hand did he glance
at his host.
"We
came guesting, Asaki. We have
eaten salt and bread under this roof."
"On
my body and my blood it is," returned the Khatkan
grimly. "I shall go down to the blackness of Sabra
before you do, if the flames of death are against us." From his belt he
flipped loose his knife and offered the hilt to Jellico. "My
body for a wall between you and the dark, Captain. But also understand
this: to me, what I do now is greater than the life of any one man. Lumbrilo and the evil behind him must be rooted out. There
was no trickery in my invitation!"
They stood eye to eye, equal in height, in authority
of person, and that indefinable something which made them both masters in
their own different worlds. Then Jellico's hand went out, his fingertip flicked
the hilt of the bared blade.
"There
was no trickery," he conceded. "I knew that your need was great when
you came to the Queen."
Since both the captain and Tau appeared to accept
the situation, Dane, not quite understanding it all, was prepared to follow
their lead. And for the moment they had nothing more in plan than to visit the Zoboru preserve.
They
went by flitter—Asaki, one of his Hunter pilots, and
the three from the Queen—lifting over the rim of mountains behind the
fortress-palace and speeding north with the rising sun a flaming ball to the east.
Below, the country was stark —rocks and peaks, deep purple shadows marking the
veins of crevices. But that was swiftly behind and they were over a sea of
greens, many shades of green, with yellow, blue, even red cutting into the
general verdant carpet of treetops. Another chain of heights and then open land,
swales of tall grass already burnt yellow by the steady sun. There was a river
here, a crazy, twisted stream coiling nearly back upon itself
at times.
Once more broken land, land so ravished by
prehistoric volcanic action that it was a grotesque nightmare of
erosion-whittled outcrops and mesas. Asaki pointed to
the east. There was a dark patch widening out into a vast wedge.
"The
swamp of Mygra. It has not yet been explored."
"You could air map
it," Tau began.
The
Chief Ranger was frowning. "Four flitters have been lost trying that. Com
reports fail when they cross that last mountain ridge eastward. There is some
sort of interference which we do not yet understand. Mygra
is a place of death; later we may be able to travel along its fringe and then
you shall see. Now—" He spoke to the pilot in his own tongue and the
flitter pointed up-nose at an angle as they climbed over the highest peak they
had yet seen in this mountainous land, to reach at last a country of open grass
dotted with small forest stands. Jellico nodded approvingly.
"Zoboru?"
"Zoboru,"
Asaki assented. "We shall go up to the northern
end of the preserve. I wish to show you the roosts of the fastals.
This is their nesting season and the sight is one you will long remember. But
we shall take an eastern course; I have two Ranger stations to check on the way."
It was after they left the
second station that the flitter swung farther out eastward, again climbing over
the chain of heights to sight one of the newly discovered wonders the staff at
the last station had reported—a crater lake.
And
the flitter skimmed down across water which was a rich emerald in hue, filling
the crater from one rock wall to the other with no beach at the foot of those
precipitant cliffs. As the machine arose to clear the far wall, Dane tensed.
One of his duties aboard the Queen was
flitter pilot for planet-wise trips. And ever since they had taken off that
morning he had unconsciously flown with the Khatkan
pilot, anticipating each change or adjustment of the controls. Now he felt that
sluggish response to the other's lift signal, and instinctively his own hand
went out to adjust a power feed lever.
They
made the rise, were well above the danger of the cliff wall. But the machine was
not responding properly. Dane did not need to watch the pilot's swiftly moving
hands to guess that they were in trouble. And his slight concern deepened into
something else as the flitter began to drop nose again. In front of him, Captain
Jellico shifted uneasily, and Dane knew that he, too, was alerted.
Now
the pilot had plunged the power adjuster to the head against the control board.
But the nose of the flitter acted as if it were overweighted
or magnetically attracted by the rocks below. The best efforts of the man
flying it could not keep it level. They were being drawn earthward, and all the
pilot could do only delayed the inevitable crack-up. The Khatkan
was turning the machine north to avoid what lay below, for here a long arm of
the Mygra swamp clasped about the foot of the mountain.
The
Chief Ranger spoke into the mike of the com unit while the pilot continued to
fight against the pull which was bringing them down. Now the small machine was
below the level of the volcanic peak which cradled the lake, and the mountain lay
between them and the preserve.
Asaki gave a muffled exclamation, slapped the com
box, spoke more sharply into the mike. It was apparent he was not getting the
results he wanted. Then with a quick glance about he snapped an order:
"Strap in I"
His Terr an companions had already
buckled the wide webbing belts intended to save them from crash shock. Dane saw
the pilot push the button to release fend cushions. In spite of his pounding heart,
a small fraction of his brain recognized the other's skill as the Khatkan took a course to bring them down on a relatively
level patch of sand and gravel.
Dane
raised his head from the shelter of his folded arms. The Chief Ranger was busy
with the pilot, who lay limply against the controls. Captain Jellico and Tau
were already pulling at the buckles of their protective crash belts. But one
look at the front of the flitter told Dane that it would not take to the air again
without extensive repairs. Its nose was bent up and back, obscuring the forward
view completely. However, the pilot had made a miraculously safe landing
considering the terrain.
Ten
minutes later, the pilot restored to consciousness and the gash in his head bandaged,
they held a council of war.
"The
com was off, too. I did not have a chance to report before the crash," Asaki put the situation straighdy.
"And our exploring parties have not yet mapped this side of the range; it
has a bad reputation because of the swamp."
Jellico
measured the heights now to their west with resigned eyes. "Looks
as if we climb."
"Not
here," the Chief Ranger corrected him. "There is no passing through
the crater lake region on foot. We must travel south along the edge of the
mountain area until we do find a scalable way into the preserve region."
"You
seem very certain we are not going to be rescued if we stay right here," Tau
observed. "Why?"
"Because
I'm inclined to believe that any flitter that tries to reach us may run into
the same trouble. Also, they have no com fix on us. It will be at least a day
or more before they will even begin to count us missing, and then they will have
the whole northern portion of the preserve to comb;
there are
not enough men here—I can give you a multitude of reasons, Medic."
"One of which might be sabotage?"
demanded Jelhco.
Asaki
shrugged. "Perhaps. I am not loved in some quarters.
But there may also be something fatal to flitters here as there is over Mygra. We thought the crater lake
district safely beyond the swamp influence, but it may not be so."
But you took the chance of traveling over it,
Dane thought, though he did not comment aloud. Was this another of the Chief Ranger's
attempts to involve them in some private trouble of his own? Though to deliberately
smash up a flitter and set them all afoot in this wilderness was a pretty drastic
move.
Asald had started to unload emergency supplies
from the flitter. They each had a trail bag for a pack. But when the pilot staggered
over to pull out a set of stass belts and Jelhco began to uncoil them, the Chief Ranger shook his head.
"With
the feeder beam shut off by the mountains, I fear those will no longer
work."
Jellico
tossed one on the crumpled nose of the flitter and punched its button with the
tip of the needier barrel. Then he threw a rock at the dangling belt. The stone
landed, taking the wide protective band with it to the ground. That force
field which should have warded off the missive was not working.
"Oh,
fine!" Tau opened his trail bag to pack concentrates. Then he smiled
crookedly. "We aren't signed in for killing licenses, sir. Do you pay our
fines if we are forced to shoot a hole through something that disputes the
right of way?"
To Dane's
surprise, the Chief Ranger laughed. "You are off preserve now, Medic Tau.
The rules do not cover wild land. But I would suggest we now hunt a cave before
nightfall."
"Lions?" asked Jellico.
Dane,
remembering the black and white beast Lumbrilo had
presented, did not enjoy that thought. They had—his gaze went from man to man
checking weapons—the needier
Asaki carried, and another the
pilot had slung by its carrying strap over his shoulder. Tau and the captain
both were armed with blasters and he had a fire ray and a force blade, both
considered small arms but deadly enough perhaps even to dampen a lion's enthusiasm
for the chase.
"Lions,
graz, rock apes, " Asaki fastened the mouth of his trail bag. "All
are hunters or killers. The graz
send out scouts, and they are big and formidable enough to have no enemies.
Lions hunt with intelligence and skill. Rock apes are dangerous, but luckily
they cannot keep silent when they scent their prey and
so give one warning."
As
they climbed up-slope from the flitter, Dane, looking back, saw that perhaps Asaki was right in his belief that they had better try to
help themselves rather than wait for rescue. Putting aside the excuse of fearing
another crack-up, the wrecked flitter made no outstanding mark on the ground.
The higher they climbed, the less it could be distinguished from the tumble of
rocks about it.
He had
lagged a little behind and, when he hurried to catch up, found Jellico standing
with his distance vision lenses to his eyes, directing them toward that shadow
marking the swamp. As the younger spaceman reached him, the captain lowered
the glasses and spoke:
"Take
your knife, Thorson, and hold it close to that rock-over there." He
pointed to a rounded black knob protruding from the soil a little off their path.
Dane
obeyed, only to have the blade jerk in his hand. And when he loosened his hold
in amazement, the steel slapped tight against the stone.
"Magnetic!"
"Yes. Which might explain
our crash. Also this." Jellico held out a
field compass to demonstrate that its needle had gone completely mad.
"We
can use the mountain range itself for a guide," Dane said with more
confidence than he felt.
"True
enough. But we may have trouble when we head west again." Jellico let the
lenses swing free on their cord about his neck. "If we were wrecked on
purpose"—his mouth tightened and the old blaster bum on his cheek stretched
as did his jaw set—"then someone is going to answer a lot of questions—and
fasti"
"The Chief Ranger,
sir?"
"I don't know. I just don't know!"
The captain grunted as he adjusted his pack and started on.
If fortune had failed them earlier, she
smiled on them now. Asaki discovered a cave before sundown, located not too far from a mountain stream. The Ranger sniffed the air before that dark opening as
the Hunter pilot shed his equipment and crept forward on his hands and knees,
his head up and his nostrils expanding as he, too, tested the scent from the cave
mouth.
Scent? It
was closer to a stench, and one ripe enough to turn the stomach of an off-worlder. But the Hunter glanced back over his shoulder and
nodded reassuringly.
"Lion. But old. Not here within five days at least."
"Well
enough. And even old lion scent will keep away rock apes. We'll clean some and
then we can rest undisturbed," was his superior's comment.
The
cleaning was easy for the brittle bedding of dried bracken and grass the beast
had left burned quickly, cleansing with both fire and smoke. When they raked
the ashes out with branches, Asaki and Nymani brought in handfuls of leaves which they crumpled and
threw on the floor, spreading an aromatic odor which banished most of the
foulness.
Dane,
at the stream with the canteens to fill, chanced upon a small pool where there was a spread of smooth yellow sand. Knowing well
the many weird booby traps one might stumble into on a strange world, the Terran prospected carefully, stirring up the stand with a
stick. Sighting not so much as a water insect or a curious
fish, he pulled off his boots, rolled up his breeches and waded in. The water was
cool and refreshing, though he dared not drink it until the purifier was added.
Then, with the filled canteens knotted together
by their straps, he put on his boots and
climbed to the cave where Tau waited with water tablets.
Half an hour later Dane sat cross-legged by
the fire, turning a spit strung with three small birds Asaki
had brought in. One foot closer to the heat began to tingle and he eased off
his boot; his cramped toes suddenly seeming to have doubled in size. He was staring
wide-eyed at these same toes, puffed, red, and increasingly painful to the
touch, when Nymani squatted beside him, inspected his
foot closely, and ordered him to take off his other boot.
"What
is it?" Dane found that shedding the other boot was a minor torture in itself.
Nymani was cutting tiny splinters, hardly thicker
than a
needle, from a stick.
"Sand
worm—lays eggs in flesh. We bum them out or you have bad foot."
"Bum
them out!" Dane echoed, and then swallowed as he watched Nymani advance a splinter to the fire.
"Burn
them," the Khatkan repeated firmly. "Bum
tonight, hurt some tomorrow; all well soon. No bum—very bad."
Dane
ruefully prepared to pay the consequences of his first brush with the unpleasant
surprises Khatka had to offer.
rv
Dane regarded his throbbing feet morosely. Nymani's operations with burning splinters had been hard
to take, but he had endured them without disgracing himself before the Khatkans, who appeared to regard such a mishap as just another
travel incident. Now, with Tau's salve soothing the
worst of the after affects, the Terran was given time
to reflect upon his own stupidity and the fact that he might now prove a drag
on the whole party the next morning. "That's queer. . . ."
Dane
was startled out of the contemplation of his misery to see the medic on his
knees before their row of canteens, the vial of water purifier held to the
firelight for a closer inspection.
"What's the matter?"
"We must have hit with a pretty hard
thump back there. Some of these pills are powder! Have to guess about the
portion to add." With the tip of his knife blade Tau scraped a tiny amount
of pill fragments into each waiting canteen. "That should do it. But if
the water tastes a littie bitter, don't let it bother
you."
Bitter
water, Dane thought, trying to flex his still swollen toes, was going to be the
least of his worries in the morning. But he determined that his boots should go
on at daybreak, and he would keep on his feet as long as the others did, no matter
how much it cost him.
And when they set out shordy after daybreak, wanting
to move as far as they could before the heat hours when they must rest, the
going was not too bad. Dane's feet were tender to the touch, but he could shuffle along at
the tail of the procession with only Nymani playing
rear guard behind him.
Jungle lay before them and bush knives began
to swing, clearing their path. Dane took his turn with the rest at that chore,
thankful that the business of cutting their way through that mass of greenery
slowed them to a pace he could match —if not in comfort, then by willpower.
But
the sand worms were not the only troubles one could encounter on Khatka. Within an hour Captain Jellico stood sweating and
speaking his mind freely in the native tongues of five different planets while
Tau and Nymani worked as a team with skinning knives.
They were not flaying the spaceman, but they came near to that in places as
they worried a choice selection of tree thoms
out of his arm and shoulder. The captain had been unfortunate enough to trip and
fall into the embrace of a very unfriendly bush.
Dane
inspected a fallen tree for evidence of inimical wild life, and then rested his
blanket between him and it as a protecting cushion before he sat down. These
trees were not the towering giants of the true forests, but rather oversized
bushes which had been made into walls by twined vines. Brilliant bursts of
flowers were splotches of vivid color, and the attendant insect life was altogether
too abundant. Dane tried to tally his immunity shots and hoped for the best. At
the moment he wondered why anyone would want to visit Khatka,
let alone pay some astronomical sum for the privilege. Though
he could also guess that the plush safari arranged for a paying client might
be run on quite different lines from their own present trek.
How could a tracker find his way through this? With the
compasses playing crazy tricks into the bargain! Jellico knew that the compasses
were off, yet the captain had followed Asaki's lead
without question, so he must trust the Ranger's forest craft. But Dane wished
they were clear on the mountain side again.
Time
had little meaning in that green gloom. But when they worked through to meet
rock walls again, the sun said it was well into the after part of the day. They
sheltered for a breather under the drooping limbs of one of the last trees.
"Amazing!" Jellico, his torn arm in a sling across his
chest, came down-slope from the higher point where he
had been using the distance lenses. "We struck straight across and cut off
about ten miles by that jungle jog. Now I believe all that I've heard of your
people's ability to cross wilderness and not lose their built in 'riding beams,'
sir. With the compasses out, I'll admit I've been nourishing a healthy set of
doubts."
Asaki laughed. "Captain, I do not question
your ability to flit from world to world, or how you have learned to set up trade
with strange humans and non-humans alike. To each his own mystery.
On Khatka every boy before he becomes a man must learn to navigate the jungle, and
with no instruments to help him, only what lies in here." He touched his
thumb to his forehead. "So through generations we have developed our
homing instincts. Those who did not, also did not live to father
others who might have had the same lack. We are hounds who can run on a
scent, and we are migrators who have better than a
compass within our own bodies."
"Now
we take to climbing again?" Tau surveyed the way before them critically.
"Not at this hour. That sun on the upward
slopes can cook a man's
skin were he to touch any rock. We wait. . . ."
Waiting for the Khatkans
was a chance to sleep. They curled up on their light blankets. But the three spacemen
were restless. Dane would have liked to have taken off his boots, but feared he
could not replace them; and he could tell from the way the captain shifted his
position that Jellico was in pain too. Tau sat quietly, staring at nothing Dane
could see, unless it was a tall rock thrust out of the slope like a finger pointing skyward.
"What color is that rock?"
Surprised,
Dane gave the stony finger closer attention. To him it was the same color as
most of the other rocks, a weathered black which in certain lights appeared to
carry a brownish film.
"Black, or maybe
dark brown?"
Tau looked past him to Jellico. The captain
nodded. "I'd agree with that."
Tau cupped his hands over his eyes for a
moment and his lips moved as if he were counting. Then he took his hands away and
stared up-slope. Dane watched the medic's eyelids blink slowly. "Nothing but black or brown?" Tau pressed.
"No."
Jellico supported his injured arm upon his knees, leaning forward, as intent
upon the designated rock as if he expected it to assume some far more startling
appearance.
"Queer,"
Tau said to himself, and then added briskly,
"You're right, of course. That sun can play tricks with one's eyes."
Dane continued to watch the finger rock. Maybe
strong sunlight could play tricks, but he could see nothing odd about that
rough lump. And since the captain asked no questions of Tau, he did not quite want
to either.
It was
perhaps a half-hour later, and the medic and Jellico had both succumbed to the
quiet, the heat, and their own fatigue, when Dane did sight a movement
up-slope. The throbbling in his feet was worse now that
he had nothing to occupy his mind but his own troubles, and he was sitting facing
the finger rock.
Was that what Tau had seen earlier? That quick movement around the side of the rough pillar? But if so, why the question of color? There it was again! And
now, centering all his attention on that one point, the Terran
picked out the outline of a head—a head grotesque enough to be something
conjured out of Lumbrilo's sorcerer's imagination. Had
Dane not seen its like among the tri-dee prints in Captain
Jellico's collection, he would have believed that his eyes were playing tricks.
It was a bullet-shaped head, embellished by
two out-sized prick ears, the hair-tufted pointed tips of which projected well above
the top of the skull. Round eyes were set deeply in sunken pits. The mouth was a
swinish snout from which lolled a purple tongue, though the rest of that gargoyle
head was very close in color to the rock against which it half rested.
Dane had no doubts that the rock ape was
spying upon the small camp. Having heard tales of those semi-intelligent animals—the
most intelligent native creatures of Khatka—most of
which were concerned with their more malignant characteristics, Dane was alarmed.
That lurker could be an advance scout of some pack. And a pack of rock apes, if
able to surprise their prey, were formidable opponents.
Asaki
stirred, sat up. And that round head above turned to follow the Chief Ranger's
every move.
"Above
... by the finger rock ... to the right . .
" Dane kept his voice close to a whisper. When he saw the sudden
constriction of muscle across the Khatkan's bare
shoulders, he knew that the other had heard and understood.
Only,
if Asaki had spotted the rock ape, he did not betray
his knowledge. The Khatkan got lithely to his feet.
Then one of those feet stirred Nymani into the instant
wakefulness of the wilderness-trained man.
Dane
slid his hand about the bole of the tree and touched Jellico, watched the captain's
gray eyes open with a similar awareness. Asaki picked
up his needier. Weapon in hand, he whirled and fired almost in one connected
movement. It was the fastest shot Dane had ever seen.
The gargoyle head lifted away from the rock, and
then turned to one side as its body, somehow vaguely obscene in its resemblance
to the human form, fell away, to sprawl limply down-slope.
Though the dead rock ape had not had a chance
to give tongue, there came a cry from above, a coughing, deep-throated hawking.
Down the steep incline bumped a round white ball, bouncing past the tumbled carcass
of the ape, sailing up into the air, to strike and burst open a few feet away.
"Back!" With one arm Asaki sent Jellico, his nearest
neighbor, tumbling back into the jungle. Then the Chief Ranger pumped a stream
of needle rays into the remains of the ball. A shrill, sweet humming arose as
red motes, vivid as molten copper in the sunlight, climbed on wings beating too
fast to be seen.
The debris of the nest smoked into nothing.
But no needle ray could hope to stop all the poisonous army issuing forth from
it, fighting mad, to seek any warm-blooded creature within scenting distance.
The men threw themselves into the brush, rolling in the thick mold of the vegetable
decay on the ground, rubbing its moist plaster over their bodies in frantic haste.
Red-hot
fire, far worse than any of the splinter torment Dane had undergone the night
before, pierced between his shoulders. He rolled on his back, shoving himself along,
both to kill the fire-wasp and coat the sting with cooling mold. Cries of pain
told him that he was not the only sufferer, as all dug hands into the slimy
stuff under them and slapped it over their faces and heads.
"Apes.
. . ." That half shout got through to alert the men on the jungle floor.
True to their nature, the rock apes, now streaming downhill, were coughing
their challenges, advertising their attack. And it was only that peculiarity
of their species which saved their intended victims.
The apes
came forward, partially erect, at a shambling run. The first two, bulls close
to six feet, went down under fire from Asaki's
needier. A third somehow escaped, swerving to the left, and came bounding at an
angle toward Dane. The Terran jerked free his force
blade as that swine snout split wide to show greenish tusks and the horrible
stench of the creature's body made him gasp.
A taloned paw clawed at him eagerly, slipped from his
slime-covered body just as he brought the force blade up. Foul breath coughed
in his face and he stumbled back as the heavy body of the ape crashed against
him, cut in half by the weapon. To Dane's sickened horror the paws still clawed
for him, the fangs still gnashed as he rolled free of the mangled body and
somehow got to his feet.
The
roar of a blaster, of two blasters, drowned out the clamor of the apes as Dane
drew his fire ray, set his shoulders against a tree bole and prepared to fight it
out. He fired, saw a smaller and more nimble enemy go down screeching. Then
there were none left on their shaggy feet, though some on the ground dragged themselves forward, still striving to reach the men.
Dane
slapped a fire-wasp from his leg. He was glad of the support of the tree at his
back as the smell of the ape's blood drenching him from chest level down, and
the mess on the ground, made his stomach chum.
When
he could control his retching, he straightened. To his relief he saw that all
the others were on their feet, appar-endy unharmed.
But Tau, catching sight of the younger spaceman, gasped and started for him.
"Dane! What did they dor
His junior laughed a little hysterically. "Not mine. . . ." He swabbed with a handful
of grass at his bloodied breeches and blundered on into the sunlight.
Nymani found them a foam-flecked stream below a miniature falls where the swift current prevented the lurking of sand
worms. They stripped eagerly, cleaning first themselves and then their fouled
clothing while Tau tended the wealth of fire-wasp stings. There was little he
could do to relieve the swelling and pain, until Asaki
produced a reed-like
plant which, chopped in sections, yielded a sticky purple liquid that dried on
the sldn as a tar gum—the native remedy. So, glued and
plastered, they climbed away from the water and prepared to spend the night in a
hollow between two leaning rocks, certainly not as snug as the cave but a
fortress of sorts.
"And
credit-happy space hoppers pay a fortune for an outing like this!" Tau
commented bitterly, hunching well forward so that a certain stung portion of
his anatomy would not come in contact with the rock beneath him.
"Hardly for this," Jellico replied,
and Dane saw Nymani grin one-sidedly, his other cheek
puffed and painted sticky purple.
"We do not always encounter apes and
fire-wasps in the same day," supplied the Chief Ranger. "Also, guests
at the preserves wear stass belts."
Jellico snorted. "I
don't think you'd get any
repeats from your clients otherwise! What do we meet tomorrow? A herd of graz on stampede, or something
even more subtie and deadly?"
Nymani got up and walked a litde
way from their rock shelter. He turned down-slope and Dane saw his nostrils expand
as they had when he had investigated the cave.
"Something
is dead," he said slowly. "A very large something.
Or else—"
Asaki strode down to join his men. He gave a curt nod and Nymani skidded on down the mountain
side.
"What is it?" Jellico asked.
"It
might be many things. There is one I hope it is not," was the Chief Ranger's
somewhat evasive reply. "I will hunt a labbla—there
was fresh spoor at the stream." He set off along their back trail to
return a half hour later, the body of his kill slung across one shoulder. He was skinning it
when Nymani trotted back.
"Well?"
"Death pit," supplied the Hunter. "Poachers?" Jellico inquired.
Nymani nodded. Asaki
continued his task, but there was a glint in his dark eyes as he butchered with sure and expert strokes.
Then he glanced at the shadow extending beyond the rocks.
"I, too, would see," he told Nymani.
Jellico
arose, and Dane, interested, followed. Some five minutes later none of them
needed the native keenness of smell to detect the presence of some foulness ahead.
The odor of corruption was almost tangible in the sultry air. And it grew worse
until they stood on the edge of a pit.
Dane retreated hurriedly. This was as bad as the battlefield of the rock apes.
But the captain and the two Khatkans stood calmly assessing
the slaughter left by the hide poachers.
"Glam,
graz, hoodra," Jellico
commented. "Tusks and hides —the full line of trade stuff."
Asaki, his expression bleak, stepped back from the
pit.
"Day
old calves, old ones, females—all together. They kill wantonly and leave those
they do not choose to pelt."
"Trail—"
Nymani pointed eastward. "Leads to Mygra swamp."
'The swamps!" Asaki was shaken.
"They must be mad!"
"Or know more about this country than
your men do," Jellico corrected.
"If poachers can enter Mygra, then we can follow!"
But
not now, Dane protested silently. Certainly Asaki did
not mean that they
were to track outlaws into
swamps the Khatkan had already labeled unexplored death
traps!
Sitting up, Dane stared wide-eyed into the dark. A handful
of glowing coals, guarded by rocks, was the center of their camp. He hunched up
to that hardly knowing why he moved. His hands were shaking, his skin damp with
sweat no heat produced. Yet, now that he was conscious of the night, the Terran could not remember the nightmare from which he had
just awakened, though he was left with a growing apprehension which he could
not define. What prowled out there in that dark? Walked the mountain side?
Listened, spied and waited?
Dane half started to his feet as a form did
move into the dim light of the fire. Tau stood there, regarding him with sober
intensity.
"Bad dream?"
The younger man admitted to that with a nod,
partly against his will.
"Well, you aren't the only one. Remember
any of it?"
With
an effort, Dane looked away from the encircling dark. It was as if the fear
which had shaken him awake, now embodied, lurked right there.
"No." He rubbed sleep-smarting
eyes.
"Neither
did I," Tau remarked. "But both of 'em must have been jet-powered."
"I suppose one could expect to have
nightmares after yesterday." Dane advanced the logical explanation, yet at
the same time something deep inside him denied every word of it. He had known
nightmares before; none of them had left this aftertaste. And he wanted no
return of sleep tonight. Reaching to the pile of wood he fed the fire as Tau
settled down beside him.
"There is something
else . . ." the medic began, and then fell silent. Dane did not press him.
The younger man was too busy fighting a growing desire to whirl and aim the
fire ray into that darkness, to catch in its withering blast that lurking thing
he could feel
padded there, biding its
time.
Despite his efforts Dane did drowse again
before morning, waking unrefreshed, and, to his
secret dismay, with no lessening of his odd dislike for the country about
them.
Asaki did not suggest that they trail the poachers
into the morass of Mygra. Instead the Chief Ranger was
eager to press on in the opposite direction, find a way over the range to the
preserve where he could assemble a punitive force to deal with the outlaws. So
they began an upward climb which took them away from the dank heat of the lowlands,
into the parched blaze of the sunbaked ledges above.
The
sun was bright, far too bright, and there were few shadows left. Yet Dane,
stopping to drink sparingly from his canteen, could not lose that sense of eyes
upon him, of being tracked. Rock apes? Cunning as those beasts were, it was against
their nature to trail in utter silence, to be able to carry through a long-term
project. Lion, perhaps?
He
noted that Nymani and Asaki
took turns at rear guard today, and that each was alert. Yet, oddly enough,
none of them mentioned the uneasiness they must all share.
They
had a dry climb, finding no mountain stream to renew their water supply. All
being experienced in wilderness travel, they made a mouthful of liquid go a
long way. When the party halted slighdy before midday,
canteens were still half full.
"Haugh!
They
jerked up, hands on weapons. A rock ape, its hideous body clearly seen here, capered,
coughed, spat. Asaki fired from the hip and the thing
screeched, clawed at its chest where the dark blood spewed out, and raced for
them. Nymani cut the beast down and they waited
tensely for the attack of the thing's tribe, which should have followed the abortive
lunge on the part of their scout. But there was nothing—neither
sound nor movement.
What did follow froze them all momentarily.
That mangled body began to move again, drew itself
together, crawled toward them. Dane knew that it was impossible that the creature
could live with such wounds. Yet the beast advanced, its head lolling on its
hunched shoulders so that the eyes were turned blindly up to the full glare of
the sun, while it crawled to reach the man it could not see.
"Demonl" Nymani dropped his
needier, shrank back against the rocks.
As the thing advanced, before their eyes the
impossible happened. Those gaping wounds closed, the head straightened on the almost
invisible neck, the eyes glared once more with life, and slaver dripped from
the swine snout.
Jellieo caught up the needier Nymani
had dropped. With a coolness Dane envied, the captain
shot. And for the second time the rock ape collapsed, torn to ribbons.
Nymani screamed, and Dane tried to choke back his own
cry of horrified protest. The dead thing put on life for the second time, crawled,
got somehow to its feet, healed itself, and came on. Asaki,
his face greenish-pale, stepped out stiffly as if each step he took was forced
by torture. He had dropped his needier. Now he caught up a rock as large as his
own head, raised it high with arms on which the muscles stood out like ropes.
He hurled the stone, and Dane heard as well as saw the missile go home. The
rock ape fell for the third time.
When one of those taloned
paws began to move again, Nymani broke. He ran, his
screams echoing thinly in the air, as the thing lurched up, the gory mess of
its head weaving about. If his feet would have obeyed him, Dane might have
followed the Khatkan. As it was, he drew his ray and aimed
it at that shambling thing. Tau struck up the barrel.
The
medic's face was livid; there was the same horror in his eyes. But he moved out
to front that monster.
A
spot of shadow coalesced on the ground, deepened in hue, took on substance.
Crouched low facing the rock ape, its haunches quivering for a deadly spring, narrowed
green eyes holding on its prey, was a black leopard.
The tiny forward and backward movements of
its body steadied, and it arched through the air, brought down the ape. A
pitting, snarling tangle rolled across the slope—and was gonel
Asaki's hands shook as he drew them down his sweating
face. Jellico readied a second clip in the needier mechanically. But Tau was
swaying so that Dane leaped to take the shock of the other's weight as he collapsed.
Only for a moment did the medic hang so, then he
struggled to stand erect.
"Magic?" Jellico's voice, as controlled as ever,
broke the silence.
"Mass
hallucination," Tau corrected him. "Very
strong." "How!" Asaki swallowed and began again. "How was it
done?"
The medic shook his head. "Not by the
usual methods, that is certain. And it worked on us—on me—when we weren't
conditioned. I don't understand that!"
Dane
could hardly believe it yet. He watched Jellico stride to where the tangle of
struggling beasts had rolled, saw him examine bare ground on which no trace of
the fight remained. They must accept Tau's explanation;
it was the only sane one.
Asaki's features were suddenly convulsed with a rage
so stark that Dane realized how much a veneer was the painfully built civilization
of Khatka.
"Lumbrilol"
The Chief Ranger made of that
name a curse. Then with a visible effort he controlled his emotions and came to
Tau, looming over the slighter medic almost menacingly.
"How?"
he demanded for the second time. "I don't know." "He will try again?"
"Not the same perhaps—"
But Asaki had already
grasped the situation, was looking ahead.
"We shall not know," he breathed,
"what is real, what is not."
"There
is also this," Tail warned. "The unreal can kill the believer just as
quickly as the real!"
"That
I know also. It has happened too many times lately. If we could only find out howl Here are no drums, no singing
—none of the tricks to tangle a man's mind that he usually uses to summon his
demons. So without Lumbrilo, without his witch tools,
how does he make us see what is not?"
"That we must discover and speedily, sir. Or else we shall be lost among the unreal and
the real."
"You
also have the power. You can save us!" Asaki
protested.
Tau
drew his arm across his face. Very little of the normal color had returned to
his thin, mobile features. He still leaned against Dane's supporting arm.
"A
man can do only so much, sir. To battle Lumbrilo on
his own ground is exhausting and I can not fight so
very often."
"But will he not also be exhausted?"
"I
wonder . . ." Tau gazed beyond the Khatkan to
the barren ground where leopard and rock ape had ceased to be. "This magic
is a tricky thing, sir. It builds and feeds upon a man's own imagination and
inner fears. Lumbrilo, having triggered ours, need
not strive at all, but let us ourselves raise that which will attack us."
"Drugs?" demanded
Jellico.
Tau gave a start sufficient to take him out
of Dane's loose hold. His hand went to the packet of aid supplies which was his
own care, his eyes round with wonder and then shrewdly alert.
"Captain, we disinfected those thorn
punctures of yours. Thorson, your foot salve. . . . But, no, I didn't use anything—"
"You
forget, Craig, we all had scratches after that fight with the apes."
Tau sat down on the ground. With feverish haste
he unsealed his medical supplies, laid out some containers. Then delicately he
opened each, examined its contents closely by eye, by smell, and two by taste.
When he was done he shook his head.
"If
these have been in any way meddled with, I would need laboratory analysis to
detect it. And I don't believe that Lumbrilo could
hide traces of his work so cleverly. Or has he been off-planet? Had much to do
with off-worlders?" he asked the Chief Ranger.
"By the nature of his position he is
forbidden to space voyage, to have any close relationship with any off-worlder. I do not think, medic, he would choose your healing
substances for his mischief. There would only be chance to aid him then in
producing the effects he wants. Though there is often call for first aid in travel,
he could not be certain
you would use any of your
drugs on this trip to the preserve."
"And
Lumbrilo was certain.
He threatened something such as this," Jellico reminded them.
"So
it would be something which we would all use, which we had to depend upon. . .
."
"The waterl"
Dane had been holding his own canteen ready to drink. But as that possible explanation
dawned in his mind, he smelled instead of tasted the liquid sloshing inside.
There was no odor he could detect. But he remembered Tau commenting on the
powdered purifier pills at their first camp.
"That's
it!" Tau dug further into his kit, brought out the vial of white powder
with its grainy lumps. Pouring a little into the palm of his hand he smelled
it, touched it with the tip of his tongue. "Purifier and something
else," he reported. "It could be one of half a dozen drugs, or some native
stuff from here which we've never classified."
"True.
There are drugs we have found here." Asald
scowled down at the green mat of jungle. "So our water is poisoned?"
"Do
you always purify it?" Tau asked the Chief Ranger. "Surely during the
centuries since your ancestors landed on Khatka you
must have adapted to native water. You couldn't have lived otherwise. We must
use the purifier, but must you?"
"There is water and water." Asald shook his own canteen, his scowl growing fiercer as
the gurgle from its depths was heard. "From springs on the other side of
the mountains we drink—yes. But over here, this close to the Mygra swamps, we have not done so. We may have to chance it."
"Do
you think we are literally poisoned?" Jellico bored directly to the heart
of their private fears.
"None
of us have been drinking too heavily," Tau observed thoughtfully. "And
I don't believe Lumbrilo had outright killing in
mind. How long the effect will last I have no way of telling."
"If we saw one rock ape," Dane
wondered, "why didn't we see others? And why here and
now?"
"That!"
Tau pointed ahead on the trail Asaki had picked for
their ascent. For a long moment Dane could see nothing of any interest there and
then he located it—a finger of rock. It did not point directly skyward this time, in fact it slanted so that its tip indicated their back
trail. Yet in outline the spire was very similar to that outcrop from which the
real rock ape had charged them the day before.
Asaki
exclaimed in his own tongue and slapped his hand hard against the stock of the
needier.
"We
saw that and so again we saw an ape also! Had earlier we been charged by graz or jumped by a lion in such a
place, then again we would have been faced by graz or
lion here!"
Captain
Jellico gave a bark of laughter colored only by the most sardonic humor. "Clever enough. He merely leaves it to us to select our
own ghost and then repeat the performance in the next proper setting. I wonder
how many rocks shaped like that one there are in these mountains?
And how long will a rock ape continue to pop out from behind each one we do
find?"
"Who knows? But as long as we drink this
water we're going to continue to have trouble; I feel safe in promising that,"
Tau replied. He put the vial of doctored purifier into a separate pocket of his
medical kit. "It may be a problem of how long we can go without water."
"Perhaps,"
Asaki said softly. "Only not all the water on Khatka comes nrnning
in streams."
"Fruit?" Tau asked.
"No, trees. Lumbrilo is not a hunter, nor could he be certain
when and where his magic would go to work. Unless the flitter was deliberately
sabotaged, he was planning for us to use our canteens in the preserve. That is
lion country and there are long distances between springs. This is jungle below
us and there is a source there I think w» can safely tap. But first I must find
Nymani and prove to him that this is truly deviltry
of a sort, but not demon inspired."
He was gone, running lightly down-slope in
the direction his hunter had taken, and Dane spoke to Captain Jellico.
"What's this about water
in trees, sir?"
"There is a species of tree here, not
too common, with a thickened trunk. It stores water during the rainy season to
five on in the hot months. Since we are in the transition period between rains,
we could tap it—if we locate one of the trees. How about that, Tau? Dare we
drink that without a purifier?"
"Probably a choice of two evils, sir. But we have had our preventive shots. Personally,
I'd rather battle disease than take a chance on a mind-twisting drug. You can
go without water just so long. . . ."
"I'd like to have a little talk with Lumbrilo," remarked Jellico, the mildness in his
voice very deceptive.
"I'm going to have a little talk with Lumbrilo, if and
when we see him againl" promised Tau.
"What are our chances, sir?" Dane asked.
He screwed the cap back on his canteen, his mouth feeling twice as dry since he
knew he dared not drink.
"Well, we've faced gambles before."
Tau sealed the medical kit. "I'd like to see one of those trees before
sundown. And I don't want to face another pointed rock today!"
"Why
the leopard?" asked Jellico reflectively. "Another
case of using flame to fight fire? But Lumbrilo
wasn't among those present to be impressed."
Tau
rubbed his hand across his forehead. "I don't really know, sir. Maybe I
could have made the ape vanish without a counter projection, but I don't think
so. With these hallucinations it is better to battle one vision against another
for the benefit of those involved. And I can't even tell you why I selected a
leopard—it just flashed into mind as about the fastest and most deadly animal
fighter I could recall at that moment."
"You'd better work out a good list of
such fighters." Jel-lico's grim humor showed again.
"I can supply a few if you need them. Not that I don't share your hope we
won't see any more trigger rocks. Here comes Asaki
with his wandering boy."
The
Chief Ranger was half-leading, half-supporting his hunter, and Nymani seemed only half-conscious. Tau got to his feet and
hurried to meet them. It would appear that their search for the water tree
would be delayed.
They withdrew to a spot hacked from the edge of the jungle,
leaving a screen of green between them and the traitorous up-slope. But within
the few hours of daylight left them, it was proven that Asald
had been overly optimistic in his hopes of discovering a water tree. They were
now in a narrow tongue of land between the range and the swamps, and this
territory was limited. Nymani, still shaken, was of
little help, and the spacemen did not dare to strike out into unexplored land alone.
So they mouthed dry concentrates and dared
not drink. Dane was tempted to pour out the liquid in his canteen. Water so
close to hand was a continual torment. And, now that they were away from the
heights and the possibility of more finger-shaped rocks, surely the threat in
that moisture was small in comparison to the needs of his body. Only that caution
which was drilled into every Free Trader supplied a brake to his thirst.
Jellico drew the back of his hand across cracked
lips. "Suppose we should draw lots—some of us drink, one or two not. Could
we manage that way until we were over the mountains?"
"I
wouldn't want to chance it, unless we are left with
no other choice. There is no way of telling how long the drug works. Frankly,
right now I'm not even sure I could detect a hallucination for very long under
these conditions," was Tau's discouraging verdict.
If any of them slept that night, they did so
only in snatches. The apprehension which had come with the previous night was back,
intensified, and that lurking, indefinable fear rode them hard.
They were shaken out of
their private terrors shortly after dawn. There were always sounds to be heard
in the jungle: the cries of unseen birds, the crash of some tree eaten alive by
parasitic sapping. But what broke now was no bird call, no isolated tree falling.
A trumpeting roar, the crackling smash of vegetation, heralded a real menace. Asaki spun to face northward, though there was nothing to
be seen there except the unshaken wall of the jungle.
"Graz! Graz on stampede!" Nymani
joined his superior.
Jellico
arose swiftly and Dane read on the captain's face the seriousness of this. The
off-worlder turned to his own
men with a sharp order. "On your feet! We may have
to move on the double. Up-mountain?" he demanded of the Chief Ranger.
The other was still listening, not only with
his ears but with the whole of his tense body. Three of the deer-like creatures
they had hunted for food broke out of the green wall, fled past the men as if
the latter was invisible. And behind them, the hunted now and not the hunter, came a lion, its strikingly marked black-and-white hide
dramatic in the light of the morning. It showed fangs in a snarl and then was
gone in one huge bound. More deer things, scurrying of other
small creatures, moving too fast for clear identification, and behind them the
fury of destruction which marked the headlong advance of Khatka's
largest mammals slamming through the jungle.
They had started up-slope when Nymani cried out. A white bulk, hard to
distinguish in that light against the gray of the earth, headed after them.
Dane had a fleering glimpse of curled tusks, of an open mouth, raw-red and wide
enough to engulf his whole head, of shaggy legs driving at an unbelievable pace.
Asaki snapped a beam from the needier. The white
monster roared and came on. They dived for the scant cover offered as the graz bull died, not two yards away
from the Chief Ranger, its heavy body skidding along the earth with the force
of its speed as it went down
"That
did it!" Jellico sighted coolly with his blaster as a second bulk fighting
mad, tore from the jungle and pounded at them. Behind it a third tusked head
thrust out of the brush, large eyes searched for an enemy. Dane studied the dead
bull, but the animal did not come to life this time. These were not hallucinations.
And the malignancy of the rock apes, the cunning of the native Khatkan lion, were pallid things compared to a graz herd on the rampage.
The
second bull yelped with an almost canine complaint as Jellico's blaster caught
it head-on. Blinded, the beast blundered ahead, climbing the mountain side.
The third met a ray from Nymani's needier. But the
Chief Ranger leaped from behind his sheltering rock to the one where the captain
had taken refuge and pulled him into the open
"They must not corner
us here!"
Jellico
agreed to that. "Come onl" he barked to Tau
and Dane.
They
fled along a rough way, trying to gain altitude, but finding a rising cliff wall
which could not be easily climbed. Two more graz went down, one badly wounded, one safely dead.
Behind them more white heads came from the brush. What original cause had started
the stampede the fugitives could not guess, but now the fear and anger of the animals
were centering upon them.
And, in spite of their efforts, the party was
being herded into a pocket between the jungle below, where the main body of graz crashed along, and a steep wall.
Given time to find the necessary finger and toe holds, a man might climb that wall,
but they could not attempt it now. The portion of ledge on which they ran,
stopped to fire, and then ran on again, angled to the southeast And so they came to its end quickly, a drop ending in a plain
of yellow-gray mud studded with clumps of bleached vegetation which led, like
steppingstones, toward a tangle of matted, sickly looking plants and reeds.
"All
right," Tau faced around, "what do we do now? Space
lift? And using what for wings or jets?"
As if the graz could sense that they now had their victims safely
cornered, what must have been a goodly segment of the herd hooked their way
from the jungle and started up.
Puffing,
digging in those sturdy legs which had to take the massive weight of their barrel-shaped
bodies, they made their way determinedly up-grade. One might almost believe that
they had intelligendy planned this end for their
drive.
"We
go down!" Asaki yelled, and used his needier on
the leader of that climbing platoon.
"The
brush islands," Nymani amended. "I show
you!" He thrust his needier at Jellico and was over the edge of the ledge,
hanging by his hands and swinging his weight back and forth like a pendulum. At
the up-swing of his body to the right, he let go and plunged out, landing half across
one of the reed islets. The Khatkan clawed his way to
his knees, gained his feet, and leaped for the next bit of solid ground.
"You, Thorson!" Jellico jerked his head at Dane and the
younger spaceman holstered his fire ray, slipped gingerly over the drop and
prepared to repeat Nymani's feat as best he could.
He was not quite as succesful
with his sidewise swing, landing with only his forearms across the islet, the
rest of his body being swifdy embedded in what was ooze covered only with a thin crust of dried matter. The
stench of the stuff was sickening, but the fear of being entrapped in it gave
him the necessary impetus to push forward, though what was meant to be a swift
half-dive was more of a worm's progress. He grabbed frantically at brittle
stems, at coarse grass which cut like knives at his hands. But some of the material
held and he lay face down on a lump which did not give under his weight.
There
was no time to linger; he had to get to the next patch, to free this dubious landing
place for the men embattled on the rise above. Stumbling up, Dane judged the
distance with a space-trained eye and jumped to a knob Nymani
had already quitted. The Khatkan was more than halfway
along toward that promise of solid ground which the tangled mass of leprous
vegetation led to, zigzagging expertly from islet to islet.
There
was a crash and a roar behind. Dane balanced on the third of the minute islands
to look back. He saw the lash of blaster fire on the top of the cliff, Tau on
his knees on the first of their chain of steppingstones, and a graz sprawled head and forequarters in the sucking muck
where it had dived past the two defenders above. Needier and blaster fired
together again, and then Jellico swung over the cliff rim. Tau waved vigorously
and Dane took off for the next islet, just making it by lucky chance.
The
rest of the journey he took in a rush, trying not to think of anything but the
necessity of landing on some spot of firm ground. His last leap of all was too
short, so that he went knee deep in a particularly evil-smelling pool where
yellow scum spattered his breeches and he experienced the insidious pull of the
bottomless stuff. A stout branch whipped across his shoulder and he caught it.
With Nymani's wiry strength on the other end, Dane
worked free and sat, white-faced and shivering, on a mat of brush, while the Khatkan hunter turned his attention to the safety of Tau,
the next arrival.
More fortunate, or more skillful than Dane,
the medic made the hop from the last tuft without mishap. But he was blowing heavily
as he collapsed beside the other spaceman. Together they watched the progress
of their captain.
Safe on the second tussock from the shore,
Jellico halted, edged carefully around and used the
needier Nymani had left with him. A shaggy head
tossed and the bull fronting Asaki on the cliff went
down. The Chief Ranger dodged quickly to the right and a second beast rushed
out and over, to join its mired comrade in the swamp below. As Jellico shot again,
the Khatkan slung his needier and went over to gain
the first islet.
One
more graz was wounded but
lucidly it hunched about, turning its formidable tusks on those that followed,
thus keeping the path clear for its enemies. Jellico was making the journey,
sure-footedly, with the Chief Ranger only one hillock behind. Tau sighed.
"Someday
maybe this will be just another tall tale and well all
be thought bars when we spout it," he observed.
"That
is if we survive to tell it. So now which way do we go? If I had my choice it
would be up!"
When
Dane pulled himself to his feet and surveyed their small refuge, he was ready
to agree to that. For the space, packed with dead and dying vegetable matter
until one sank calf deep, was a triangle
with a narrow point running east into the swamp.
"They don't give up easily, do
they?" Jellico looked back to the shore and the cliff. Though the wounded graz bull still held the heights against
its fellows, there were others breaking from the jungle on the lower level, wandering
back and forth to paw the earth, rip up soil with their tusks, and otherwise
threaten anyone who would try to return to the strip they patrolled.
"They will not," Asaki answered bleakly. "Arouse a graz and it will trail you for days; kill any of the
herd and you have little hope of escaping them on foot."
It
would seem now that the swamp was a deterrent to pin-suit. The two beasts that
had fallen in the mire moaned in a pitiful rising note. They had ceased to
struggle and several of their land clustered on the shore near them, calling
entreatingly. Asald took careful aim with the needier
and put one animal after another out of its misery. But the flash of those
shots angered those on shore to a higher
pitch of rage.
"No going back," he said. "At least not for several days."
Tau
slapped a black, four-winged insect which had settled on his arm, its jaws wide
open for a sampling
bite. "We can't very well perch here until they forget all about us,"
he pointed out. "Not without water we can trust, and
with the local wild life ready to test us for tasty eating."
Nymani had prowled along the swampward
point of then-island, and now he made his report.
"There
is more high land to the east. Perhaps it will give us a bridge across."
At that moment Dane doubted
his ability to make any more leaps from island to island. And it would seem Tau
shared his discouragement.
"I don't suppose you could discourage
our friends on shore there with a few more shots?"
Asaki shook his head. "We do not have clips
enough to settle a whole herd. These might retreat from sight but they would be
waiting for us in the bush, and that would mean certain death. We shall have to
take the swamp road."
If Dane
had considered their earlier march misery, this was sheer torture. Since
footing was never secure, falls were frequent, and within a quarter-hour they
were all plastered with evil-smelling slime and mud which hardened to rock
consistency when exposed to the air. Painful as this was, it did protect a
portion of their bodies from the insects with which the swamp was well stocked.
And,
in spite of their efforts to find a way out, the only possible paths led them
deeper into the center of the unexplored morass. At last Asaki
called a halt and a council to consider retreat. To locate an island from which
they could at least watch the shore appealed very strongly indeed.
"We
have to have water." Tau's voice was a harsh croak,
issuing out of a mask of green mud festooned with trailing weeds.
"This
ground is rising." Asaki smacked the stock of
his needier against the surface on which he crouched. "I think perhaps
there may be clean land soon to come."
Jellico
hitched his way up a sapling, now bending under his weight. Through the vision
lenses he studied the route ahead.
"You're
right about that," he called to the Chief Ranger. "There's a showing
of the right sort of green to the left, about half a mile on. And," he glanced
about at the westering sun, "we have about an
hour yet of good fight in which to make it. I wouldn't try such a run after dark."
That
promise of green bolstered their weary spirits for a last exhausting effort.
Once again they were faced with a series of islet leaps, and now they carried
with them brush culled from the bigger tussocks to aid in times of need.
When
Dane scrambled up the last pull, staggered, and went down to his knees again,
he knew he was done. He did not even move at an excited cry from Nymani, echoed a moment later by Asaki.
It was not until the latter leaned over him, a canteen open in his hand, that Dane
aroused a litde.
"Drink!" the Khatkan
urged. "We have found a water tree. This is fresh."
The liquid might have been fresh, but it also
had a peculiar taste, which Dane did not note until he had gulped down a
generous swallow. At that moment he was past caring about anything but the fact
that he did have a portion of drinkable stuff in hand.
Here
the stunted, unnatural growth of the swamplands had given away to the more normal
vegetation of the jungle-clad lowlands. Had they come clear across the swamp, Dane
wondered dully, or was this only a large island in the midst of the stinking boglands?
He drank again and regained strength enough
to crawl to where his shipmates lay. It was some time before he was interested
in much besides the fact that he could drink when he wished. Then he watched
Jellico waver to his feet, his head turned eastward. Tau, too, sat up as if alerted
by the Queens alarm buzzer.
The Khatkans were gone, perhaps back to the water tree. But all three of the
spacemen heard that sound, a far off throbbing rhythm which was a vibration as
well. Jellico looked to Tau.
"Drums?"
"Could be." The medic screwed the cap back on his canteen.
"I'd say we have company—only I'd like to know what kind!"
They might have been mistaken about the
drums, but none of them could have been mistaken about the bolt which came out
of nowhere to slice through a tree trunk as a knife might
slash wet clay. Blaster—and a particular type of
blaster!
"Patrol
issue!" Tau lay flat, squeezing himself against the earth as if he wished
he could ooze into it.
Jellico
wriggled toward the bush in answer to a low call from Asaki,
and the others made a worm's progress in his wake. Under cover they found the
Chief Ranger reading his needier.
"Poacher camp here," he explained
bleakly. "And they know about us."
"A perfect end to a stinking day,"
remarked Tau dispassionately. "We might have guessed something of this
sort was waiting." He tried to rub away some of the dried clay coating his
chin. "But do poachers use drums?"
The
Chief Ranger scowled. "That is what Nymani has
gone to find out."
Darkness closed in while they
waited for Nymani's return. There had been no further
attack from the blaster wielder; perhaps he was only trying to pin them down
where they were. Out over the swamp, weird patches of phosphorescence moved in
small ghostly clouds, and bright dots of insects with their own built-in
lighting systems flashed spark-fashion or sailed serenely on regular flight plans.
At night the wonder of the place was far removed from the squalid reality of
the day. They chewed on their rations, drank sparingly of the water, and tried
to keep alert to any sight or sound.
That
monotonous undertone, which might or might not be drums, continued as a basic
hum to the noises of the night, drowned out at intervals by a splash, a mutter
or cry from some swamp creature. Beside Dane, Tellieo
stiffened, moved his blaster, as someone wriggled through the brush, trilling
softly.
"Off-worlders,"
Nymani reported in gasps to Asaki,
"and outlaws, too. They make a hunting sing—tomorrow they march for a
killing."
Asaki rested his chin on his broad forearm. "Outlaws?"
"They
show no lord's badge. But each I saw wears a bracelet of three, five, or ten tails.
They are Trackers indeed, and Hunters of the bestl"
"They have huts?"
"Not so. There are no dwellers in the
inners courts here." Out of habit Nymani used
the polite term for the women of his race. "I would say they tarry only
for the space of a hunt. And on the boots of one I saw salt crust."
"Salt crust!" Asaki snapped and
half arose. "So that is the type of lure they use. There must be a saline mire near here to pull game—"
"How many off-worlders?" Jellico broke in. "Three who are
Hunters, one who is different." "How different?" questioned Asaki.
"He wears upon his body garments which are
strange; on his head a round covering such as we see upon the off-worlders of the ships—"
"A spaceman!"
Asaki laughed harshly. "Why
not? They must have some method of transporting their hides."
"You can't tell me," Jellico
returned, "that anyone is able to set a ship down in this muck. It would
simply be buried for all time."
"But, Captain, what type of a spaceport
does a Free Trader need? Do you not planet your own ship on worlds where there are
no waiting cradles, no fitter shops, none of the conveniences such as mark the
field Combine maintains on Xecho?"
"Of course I do. But one does need a reasonably
smooth stretch of territory, open enough so the tail flames won't start a
forest fire. You don't ever ride a tail push down in a swamp!"
"Which testifies to a trail out of here,
fairly well-traveled, and some kind of a usable landing space not too far away,"
Asaki replied. "And that could very well serve
us."
"But
they know we are here," Tau pointed out.
It was Nymani's
turn to laugh. "Man from the stars, there is no trail so well-hidden that a
Ranger of the preserves cannot nose it out, nor any Hunter—be he a two or five
bracelet veteran—who can keep pinned down a determined man of the forest
service!"
Dane lost interest in the argument at that
moment. He was at the edge of their line, the nearest to the swamp, and he had
been watching patches of ghosdy light flitting above
the rank water-weeds. For the past few moments those wisps of faded radiance had
been gathering into a growing anthropomorphic blot hanging over the morass
several yards away. And the misty outlines were now assuming more concrete shape.
He watched, unable to believe in what he was seeing. At first the general
outline, non-defined as it was, made him think of a rock ape. But there were no
pointed ears above the round skull, no snout on the visage turned in profile
toward him.
More
and more patches of swamp luminescence were drawn to that glowing figure. What
balanced there now, as if walking the treacherous surface of the swampland, was
no animal. It was a man, or the semblance of one, a small, thin man—a man he had
seen' once before, on the terrace of Asaki's mountain
fortress.
The
thing stood almost complete, its head cocked in what was an attitude of
listening.
"Lumbrilol" Dane identified it, still knowing that the
witch doctor could not be standing there listening for them. But, to shake him
still farther, the head turned at his cry. Only there were no eyes, no features
on the white expanse which should have been a face. And somehow that made the
monster more menacing, convincing Dane against sane logic that the thing was spying on them.
"Demon!" That was Nymani; and
over his sudden quaver, robbed of all the confidence which had been there only
moments earlier, came Asaki's demand:
"What stands there, Medic? Tell us that!"
"A whip to drive us out of hiding, sir. As you know as well as I.
If Nymani spied upon them, then they have spied upon
us in turn. And this, I think, also answers another question. If there is a canker
of trouble on Khatka, then Lumbrilo
is close to its root."
"Nymani!" The Chief Ranger's voice was the crack of a
lash. "Will you forget again that you are a man, and run crying for
shelter against a shaft of light? As this off-world Medic says, Lumbrilo fashions such as that to drive us into our
enemies' hands!"
The shadow thing in the swamp moved, putting
its foot forward on surface which would not bear the weight of a human body, taking
a deliberate step and then another, heading for the concealing brush where the
fugitives lay.
"Can
you get rid of it, Tau?" Jellico asked in his usual crisp voice. He might
have been inquiring about some problem aboard the Queen.
"I'd rather get at the source." There was a
grim note in the Medic's reply, "And to do that I want to look at their camp."
"Well enoughl"
Asaki crept back in the brush.
The ghost of that which was not a man had reached
the shore of the island, stood there, its blank head turned toward them. Weird as
it was, now that the first shock of sighting it was over, the spacemen could accept
and dismiss it as they had not been so able to dismiss the phantom rock ape.
"If
that thing was sent to drive us," Dane ventured, "wouldn't we be playing
their game by going inland now?"
The
Chief Ranger did not pause in his crawl to the left. "I think not. They do
not expect us to arrive with our wits about us. Panic-stricken men are easy to
pull down. This time Lumbrilo has overreached
himself. Had he not played that game with the rock ape, he might have been able
to stampede us now."
Though the white thing continued to move inland,
it did not change course to fall in behind them on the new route. Whatever it was,
it did not possess a mind.
There was a rustling, faint but distinguishable.
Then Dane caught Nymani's whisper.
"The
one left to watch the inland trail does so no longer. We need not fear an alarm
from him. Also, here is another blaster for our
use."
Away
from the open by the swamp, the gloom was deeper. Dane was guided only by the
noises of the less-experienced Jellico and Tau made in their progress.
They
edged down into a small cut, floored with reeds and mud, where some of the
moisture from the soggy land about them gathered into a half pool. Straight
through this swale the Khatkans set course.
The drum beat grew louder.
Now there was a glow against the dark—fire ahead? Dane squirmed forward and at
last gained a vantage point from which to survey the poachers' camp.
There
were shelters erected there, three of them, but they were mainly roofs of leaves
and branches. In two of them were stored bales of hides sewn into plastic
cloth, ready to ship. Before the third hut lounged four off-worlders.
And Nymani was very right; one of them wore ship's
uniform.
To
the right of the fire was a ring of natives and another man, slightly apart,
who beat the drum. But of the witch doQtor there was
no sign. And Dane, thinking of that mist-born thing at the swamp's edge,
shivered. He could believe Tau's explanation of the
drug which produced hallucinations back on the mountain side. But how that
likeness fashioned of phosphorescence had been sent by an absent man to hunt
his enemies was a eerie puzzle.
"Lumbrilo is not here." Nymani's
thoughts must have been moving along the same path.
Dane could hear movements
in the dark beside him.
"There's
a long-distance com unit in that third hut." Tau observed.
"So
I see," Jellico snapped. "Could you reach your men over the mountain
with that, sir?"
"I
do not know. But if Lumbrilo is not here, how can he
make his image walk the night?" the Chief Ranger demanded impatiently.
"We
shall see. If Lumbrilo is not here—he shall
come." And the promise in Tau's tone was sure.
"Those off-worlders will have to be out of action
first. And with that walking thing sent to drive us in, they must be waiting
for us."
"If
they have sentries out, I will silence theml"
promised Nymani.
"You
have a plan?" Asaki's wide shoulders and upheld
head showed for an instant against the light from the camp.
"You
want Lumbrilo," Tau replied. "Very well,
sir, I believe I can give him to you, and in the doing discredit him with your Khatkans. But not with the off-worlders
free to move."
The
program was not going to be easy, Dane decided. Every one of the poachers was armed
with a Patrol blaster of the latest type, and a small part of his mind speculated
as to what would be the result of that information conveyed to official quarters.
Free Traders and Patrolmen did not always see eye-to-eye over the proper action
to be taken on the galactic frontier. The Queens crew had had one such brush with authority in the immediate past. But each
realized that the other had an important role in the general scheme of things, and
if it came to a clash between the law and outlaws, Free Traders fought beside
the Patrol.
"Why not give them what they expect—with
reservations?" inquired Jellico. "They've set us up to be stampeded
into camp, flying ahead of that tame ghost of theirs. Suppose we do stampede—after
Nymani has removed any sentries—stampede so well we
sweep right over them? I want to get at that com unit."
"You don't think they'll just mow us
down as we come in?"
"You
delivered a blow to Lumbrilo's pride; he won't be satisfied
with just your burning," the captain answered Tau, "not if I'm any
judge of character. And we'd furnish hostages of a sort—especially the Chief Ranger.
No, if they had wanted to kill us they would have shot us off those islands
when we came here. There would have Been no playing around
with ghosts and goblins."
"There is reason in your words. And it
is true they would like to have me, those outlaws down there," Asaki commented. "I am of the Magawaya
and we have pressed always for stronger security methods to be used against
such as they. But I do not see how we can take the camp."
.."We
won't go in from the front—as they expect us to do. But a try
from the north, getting at the off-worlders first. .
. . Three men causing enough disturbance to
cover operations of the other two. . . ."
"So?" There was a
moment of silence as the Chief Ranger evaluated that. Then he added a few
comments of his own.
"That
off-worlder who wears spaceman's clothing, his weapon
is not drawn, though the others are ready. But I believe that you are right in
thinking they expect to be warned by sentries. Those we can see to. Suppose then, Captain, you and I play the fear-crazed
men running from demons. Nymani will cover us from
the dark and your two men—"
Tau spoke up, "Give me leave to flush
out our other quarry, sir. I believe I can keep him occupied. Dane, you'll take
the drum."
"Drum?" With his mind on blasters, it was startling
to be offered a noise-maker.
"It's your business to get that drum. And
when you get it I want you to beat out 'Terra Bound.' You certainly can play that,
can't you?"
"I don't understand," Dane began and
then swallowed the rest of his protest, knowing that Tau was not going to explain
why he needed to have the hackneyed popular song of the spaceways
played in a Khatkan swamp. As a Free Trader he had had
quite a few odd jobs handed him during the past couple of years, but this was
the first time he had been ordered to serve as a musician.
They
waited for Nymani through dragging minutes. Surely
those in the camp .would expect their arrival soon now? Dane's fire ray was in
his hand as he measured the distance to the drummer's stand.
"It
is done," Nymani whispered from the darkness
behind them. Jellico and the Chief Ranger moved to the left; Tau crept to the
right and Dane pushed level with the medic.
"When
they move," Tau's lips were beside his ear,
"jump for that drum. I don't care how you get it, but get it and keep
it!"
"Yes, sir!"
There
was a wailing cry from the north, a howl of witless fear. The singers stopped in'mid-note, the drummer paused, his hand uplifted. Dane darted
forward in a plunge which carried him to that man. The Khatkan
did not have time
to rise from his knees as
the barrel of the fire rod struck his head, sending him spinnings
Then the drum was cradled in the spaceman's arm, close
to his chest, his weapon aimed across it at the startled natives.
The
crackle of blaster fire, the shrill whine of needlers
in action, raised a bedlam from the other end of the camp. Backing up a little,
Dane went down on one knee, his weapon ready to sweep over the bewildered natives,
the drum resting on the earth against his body. Keeping the fire rod steady,
his left hand went to work, not in the muted cadence the Khatkan
drummer had chosen, but in hard and vigorous thumps which rolled across the clamor
of the fight. There was no forgetting the beat of "Terra Bound" and
he delivered it with force, so that the familiar da-dah-da-da
droned loud enough to awaken the whole camp.
Dane's
move appeared to completely baffle the Khatkan outlaws.
They stared at him, the whites of their eyes doubly noticeable in their dark faces,
their mouths a little agape. As usual the unexpected had driven them off guard.
He dared not look away from that gathering to see how the fight at the other
end of the camp was progressing. But he did see Tau's
advance.
The
medic came into the light of the fire, not with his ordinary loose-limbed spaceman's
stride, but mincingly, with a dancing step, and he was singing to the drum béat of "Terra Bound." Dane could not understand
the words, but he knew that they patterned in and out of the drum beats, weaving
a net between singer and listeners as Lumbrilo had
woven his net on the mountain terrace.
Tau
had theml Had every one . of the native outlaws ensnared, so that Dane rested his weapon
across his knee and took up the lower beat with the fingers of his right hand-as
well.
Da-dah-da-da . . . The innocuous repetitive refrain of the original song which had been
repeating itself in his mind
faded, and somehow he caught the menace in the new
words Tau was mouthing.
Twice
the medic shuffled about a circle of his own making. Then he stooped, took a
hunting knife from the belt of the nearest Khatkan and
held it point out toward the dark east. Dane would not have believed the medic
knew the drill he now displayed, for with no opponent save the dancing firelight
he fought a knife duel, feinting, striking, twisting, retreating, attacking, all
in time to the beat of the drum Dane was no longer conscious of playing. And as
he strove it was very easy to picture another fighting against him. So that
when the knife came up in a vicious thrust which was the finish of his last attack,
Dane stared stupidly at the ground, half expecting to see a body lying there.
Once
more Tau ceremoniously saluted with his blade to the east. Then he laid it on
the ground and stood astride its gleaming length.
"Lumbrilo!" His confident voice arose above the call of
the drum. "Lumbrilo—I am waiting."
Vaguely aware that the clamor at the other end of the camp
had died away, Dane muted the sound of his drum. Over its round top he could watch
the Khatkan outlaws; their heads bobbed and swayed in
time to the beat of his fingers. He, too, could feel the pull of Tau's voice. But what would come in answer? That shadowy
thing which had been loosed to drive them here? Or the man
himself?
To Dane, the ruddy light of the fire dimmed,
yet there was no actual dying of those frames which coiled and thrust around
the wood. And the acrid scent of burning was thick. How much of what followed was
real, how much the product of his tense nerves, Dane was never afterwards able
to tell. In fact, whether all the witnesses there saw the same sights could be
questioned. Did each man, Khatkan and off-worlder, see only what his particular set of emotions and
memories dictated?
Something swept in from the east, something
which was not as tangible as the creature bom of swamp
mist. Rather it came as an unseen menace to the fire, and all that fire signifies
to human land—security, comradeship, a weapon against the age-old forces of the
dangerous night. Was that threat, too, only in their minds? Or had Lumbrilo some power to so shape his hatred?
The
unseen was cold; it sapped a man's strength, bit at his brain, weighted his hands
and feet, weakened him. It strove to soften him into
clay another could remold. Nohingness, darkness, all
that was opposed to life and warmth and reality, arose in the night, gathered
together against them.
Yet still Tau fronted that invisible wave,
his head high.
And btetween his sturdily planted feet the
knife gleamed bright with a radiance of its own.
"Ahhh—" Tau's voice curled
out, to pierce that creeping menace. Then he was singing again, the cadence of
his unknown words rising a little above the partem
wrought by the drum.
Dane
forced his heavy hands to continue the beat, his wrists to rise and fall in
defiance of that which crept to eat their strength and make them less then men.
"Lumbrilo! I, Tau, of another star, another sky, another
world, bid you come forth and range
your power against mine!" Now there was a sharper
note in that demand, the snap of an order.
He was
answered by another wave of the black negation-stronger, rolling up to smash
them down, as a wave in the heavy surf of a wild ocean pounds its force against
the beach. This time Dane thought he could see that dark mass. He tore his eyes away before it took on substance, concentrating on the
movements of his hands against the drum head, refusing to believe that hammer
of power was rising to flatten them all. He had heard Tau describe such things
in the past. But told in familiar quarters on board the Queen, such experiences were only stories. Here was danger unleashed. Yet'the medic stood unbowed as the wave broke upon him in
full.
And,
advancing Under the crest of that lick of destruction, came
its controller. This was no ghost drawn from the materials of the swamp; this
was a man, walking quietly, his hands as empty as Tau's,
yet grasping weapons none of them could see.
In
the firelight, as the wave receded sullenly, men moaned, lay face down upon the
ground, beat their hands feebly against the earth.
But, as Lumbrilo came on from the shadows, one of
them got to his hands and knees, moving with small tortured jerks. He crawled
toward Tau, his head lolling on his shoulders as the head of the dead rock ape
had done, Dane patted the drum with one hand while, with the other, he groped
for his fire ray. He tried to shout in warning and found that he could not
utter a sound.
Tau's arm
moved, raised from his side, made a circling
motion.
The
creeping man, his eyes rolled up in his head until only the whites gleamed
blindly in the limited light, followed that gesture. He drew level with the
medic, passed beyond toward Lumbrilo, whining as a hound prevented from obeying his master night lament.
"So
be it, Lumbrilo," Tau said. "This is
between you and me. Or do you not dare to risk your power against mine? Is Lumbrilo so weak a one that he must send another to do his
will?"
Raising both hands again the medic brought
them down, curling inward, until he stqoped and
touched them to the ground. When he straightened once again the knife was in
his grasp and he, tossed it behind him.
The
smoke from the fire swirled out in a long tongue, coiled about Lumbrilo and was gone. A black and white beast stood where
the man had been, its tufted tail lashing, its muzzle a
mask of snarling hate and blood lust.
But
Tau met that transformation with laughter which was like the lash of a whip.
"We both be
men, you and I, Lumbrilo. Meet me as a man and keep
those trickeries for those who have not the clear sight. A child plays as a
child, so—" Tau's voice came in a rumble, but Tau was gone. The huge, hairy thing which swayed in his place
turned a gorilla's beast visage to his enemy. For a breathless moment Terran ape confronted Khatkan
lion. Then the spaceman was himself again." The
time for games is over, man of Khatka. You have tried
to hunt us to our deaths, have you not? Therefore death shall be the portion of
the loser now."
Lion vanished, man stood watching, alertly, as
swordsman might face swordsman with a blood feud lying on their blades. To Dane's
eyes the Khatkan made no move. Yet the fire leaped
high, as if freshly fed, and flames burst from the wood.
flew
into the air, red and perilous birds, darting at Tau until they outlined him
from the ground under his boots to an arch over his head. They united and spun
faster until Dane, watching with dazzled eyes, saw the wheel become a blur of
light, hiding Tau within its fiery core. His own wrists ached with the strain
of his drumming as he lifted one hand and tried to shield his sight from the glare
of that pillar of fire.
Lumbrilo was chanting—a heavy blatt
of words. Dane stiffened; his traitorous hands were falling into the rhythm of
that other song! Straightaway he raised both from the drum head, brought them
down in a discordinate series of thumps which bore no
relation to either the song Tau wanted or that which Lumbrilo
was now crooning. Thump—thump-thump—Dane beat it out frantically, belaboring the drum head as he wanted to
sink his fists home on the body of the Khatkan witch
doctor.
The
pillar of fire swayed, fluttered as if a wind drove it— and was gone. Tau, unmarked,
smiled.
"Fire!" He pointed his fingers at Lumbrilo.
"Would you try earth, and water, and air also, wizard? Call hither your
whirlwind, up your flood, summon the land to quake. None of those shall bring
me down!"
Shapes
came flooding out of the night, some monstrous, some human, streaming past Lumbrilo to crowd into the circle of firelight. Some Dane
thought he knew, some were strangers. Men wearing space
uniforms, or the dress of other worlds, women—they strode, wept, mingled with
the monsters to laugh, curse,' threaten.
Dane guessed that Lumbrilo
sent now against the Terran the harvest of the
medic's own memories. He shut his eyes against this enforced intrusion upon another's
past, but not before he saw Tau's face, strained,
fined to the well-shaped bones beneath the thin flesh, holding still a twisted
smile as he met each memory, accepted the pain it held for him, and set it aside
unshaken.
"This, too, has no power any longer, man
who walks in the dark."
Dane opened his eyes. Those crowding wraiths
were fading, losing substance. Lumbrilo crouched,
his hps drawn back from his teeth, his hatred plain
to read.
-"I am not clay to be molded by your hands,
Lumbrilo. And now I say that the time has come to call
an end—"
Tau
raised his hands slowly once again, holding them away from his body, palms
pointing earthward. And beneath them, on either side of the spaceman, two black
shadows gathered on the surface of the ground.
"You
have fettered yourself with your own bounds. As you have been the hunter, so shall
you now be the hunted."
Those
shadows were growing as plants might issue from the packed soil of the camping
ground. When his hands were shoulder high, Tau held them steady. Now on either
side of his tautly held body crouched one of the black-and-white lions with
which Lumbrilo had identified his own brand of magic
throughout the year.
Lumbrilo's "lion" had been larger than'life, more intelligent, more dangerous, subtly different from the normal animal it counterfeited.
So now were these. And both of them raised their heads to gaze intently into
the medic's face.
"Hunt
well, brothers in fur," he said slowly, almost caressingly. "Him
whom you hunt shall grant you sport in the going."
"Stop it!" A man leaped from the shadows
behind the witch doctor. Firelight made plain his off-world dress, and he swung
up a blaster, aiming at the nearest of the waiting beasts. That flash struck
true, but it neither killed nor even singed the fine fur of the animal's pelt.
As the blaster's aim was swung from beast to
man, Dane fired first. His ray brought a scream from the other, who dropped his weapon from a
badly seared hand to reel back, cursing.
Tau
waved his hands gently. The great animal heads turned obediently, until the red
eyes were set on Lumbrilo. Facing them, the witch
doctor straightened, spat out his hate at the medic:
"I do
not run to be hunted, devil man!"
"I think
you do, Lumbrilo. For you must taste fear now as you
have made other men drink of it, so that it fills your blood and races through
your body, clouds your mind to make of you less than a man. You have hunted out
those who doubted your power, who stood in'your
chosen path, whom you wanted removed from the earth of
Khatka. Do you doubt that they wait in the last dark
for you now, ready to greet you, witch doctor? What they have known, you shall also
know. This night you have shown me all that lies in my past that is weak, that
was evil, that I may regret or find sorrow -for. So shall
you also remember through the few hours left you. Aye,
you shall run,- Lumbrilo!"
As he spoke, Tau approached the other, the two black-and-white hunters pacing
beside him. Now he stooped and caught up a pinch of soil and spat upon it three
times. Then he threw the tiny clod of earth at the witch doctor. It struck Lumbrilo just above the heart and the man reeled under what
might have been a murderous blow.
The Khatkan broke
then, completely. With a wailing cry he whirled and ran, crashing into the
brush as one who runs blindly and without hope. Behind him the two beasts leaped
noiselessly together and all three were gone.
Tau swayed, put his hand to his head. Dane
kicked away the drum, arose from his cramped position stiffly to go to him. But
the medic was not yet done. He returned to stand over the prostrate native
hunters and he clapped his hands sharply.
"You are men, and you shall act asmen henceforth. That which was,
is no longer. Stand free, for the dark power follows him who misused it, and fear no longer eats from your basins,
drinks from your cups, or lies beside you on the sleep mats."
"Tau!" Jellico's shout reached them over the cries
of the rousing Khatkans. But Dane was there first, catching
the medic before he slumped to the ground; but he was dragged with that dead weight until he sat with the
medic's head on his shoulder, the other's body resting heavily against him. For
one horror-filled moment Dane feared that he did indeed hold a dead man, that
one of the oudaw Hunters must have struck a last blow
for his discredited leader. Then Tau sighed and began to breathe deeply. Dane
glanced up, amazed, at the captain. "He's asleep!"
Jellico knelt and his hand went to test heart
beat, then to touch the medic's wom and dirty face.
"Best thing for him," he said briskly. "He's had it."
It
took some time to get the facts of their triumph sorted out. Two of the off-worlder poachers were dead. The other and the spaceman were
prisoners, while Nymani rounded up in addition the man
Dane had bumed to save Tau. When the younger spaceman
returned from making the medic comfortable in the shelter, he found Asaki and Jellico holding an impromptu court of inquiry.
The dazed native Hunters had been expertly
looped together by Nymani and, a little apart from
them, the off-worlders were under examination.
"An I-C man, eh?" Jellico, smoothing a mud-spattered
chin with a grimed hand, regarded the latest arrival measur-ingly.
"Trying to run in and break a Combine charter, were you? You'd better
spill the facts; your own head office will disown you, you ought to know that.
They never back-any failures in these undercover deals."
"I
want medical attention," snapped the other, cradling his seared hand to
his chest. "Or do you plan to turn me over to these savages?"
"Seeing
as how you tried to blast our medic," replied the captain with a grin
which was close to shark-like, "he may not feel much like patching up
those fingers of yours. Stick 'em in where they have
no business, and they're apt to get burned. At any rate he's not going to look at
'em until he's had a~chance
to rest I'll give you first aid. And while I'm working well talk.
I-C going into the poaching trade now? That news is
going to pleace Combine; they have no use for you
boys anyway."
His answer was lurid and uninformative. But
the uniform tunic the other wore could not be so easily explained away. Dane,
worn out, stretched his aching length on a pile of mats and lost all interest
in the argument.
Two days later they stood once more on the same
terrace where Lumbrilo had wrought his magic and met
his first defeat. This time no hghtning played along
the mountain ridges and the blaze of the sun was so bright and clear that one
could hardly believe in the fantastic happenings of that swamp clearing where
men had fought with weapons not made by hands. The three from the Queen moved away from the parapet to meet the Chief Ranger as he came down the
stairs.
"A messenger has just arrived. The
hunter was hunted indeed, and his going was witnessed by many—though they did
not see those which hunted him. Lumbrilo is dead; he
came to his end by the Great River."
Jellico
started. "But that is almost fifty miles from the swamp, on this side of
the mountainl"
"He
was hunted and he fled—as you promised," Asaki said
to Tau. "You made strong magic, off-world man."
The
medic shook his head slowly. "I but turned his own methods against him.
Because he believed in his power, that same power, reflected back, broke him. Had
I been facing one who did not believe. . ." He
shrugged. "Our first meeting set the pattern. From that moment he feared a
little that I could match him, and his uncertainty pierced a hole in his armor."
"Why on earth did you want 'Terra
Bound?'" burst out Dane, still seeking an explanation for that one small
mystery among the others.
Tau
chuckled. "In the first place, that blasted tune has haunted us all for so
long that I knew its rhythm was probably the one you could keep to without hardly knowing that you were beating it out. And, in the second place, its alien pattern was
a part of our particular background, to counteract Lumbrilo's
native Khatkan music, which was certainly a big factor
in his stage setting. He must have believed that we
would not find out about the drugged water and so would be prepared for any fantasy
he cared to produce. When they saw us coming out over the swamp they counted us
easy takings. His practice had always been with Khatkans,
and he judged us by-their reactions to stimuli he knew well how to use. So he failed.
..."
Asaki smiled. "Which was
good for Khatka but ill for Lumbrilo
and those using him to make mischief here.
The poacher and the outlaw Hunters will meet with our justice, which I do not
believe they will relish. But the other two, the spaceman and the company agent,
are to be sent to Xecho to face Combine authorities. It
is my thought that those will not accept kindly the meddling of another company
in their territory."
Jellico grunted. "Kindness and Combine are
widely separated in such matters.
Bu we can now take passage on the same ship as your prisoners—"
"But,
my friend, you have not yet seen the preserve. I assure you that this time there shall be no trouble. We have several days yet before you must
return to your ship—"
The
captain of the Queen
held up his hand.
"Nothing would give me greater pleasure than to inspect the Zoboru preserve, sir—next year. As it is, my holiday is
over and the Queen
is waiting for us on Xecho. Also, permit me to send you some tapes dealing with
the newest types of flitters— guaranteed against flight failures."
"Yes,
guaranteed," Tau added guilelessly, "not to break down, lose course,
or otherwise disrupt a pleasant excursion."
The Chief Ranger threw back his head and his
deep-chested laughter was echoed from the heights above
them. "Very well, Captain. Your mail run will bring you back to Xecho at intervals. Meanwhile I shall study your sales tapes
concerning the non-expendable flitters. But you shall visit Zoboru—and pleasandy,
very pleasantly, I assure you, Medic Taul"
"I wonder," Tau muttered and Dane
heard. "Just now the quiet of deep space is a far, far more entrancing
proposition!"