That sigh of displaced air was not
as loud as a breeze, but it echoed monstrously in
Shann’s ears. He could not believe in his
luck as that sound grew fainter, drew away into the
valley he had just left. With infinite caution
he raised his head from his arm, still hardly able
to accept the fact that he had not been sighted, that
the Throgs and their flyer were gone.
But that black plate was spinning
out into the sun haze. One of the beetles might
have suspected that there were Terran fugitives and
ordered a routine patrol. After all, how could
the aliens know that they had caught all but one of
the Survey party in camp? Though with all the
Terran scout flitters grounded on the field, the men
dead in their bunks, the surprise would seem to be
complete.
As Shann moved, Taggi and Togi came
to life also. They had gone to earth with speed,
and the man was sure that both beasts had sensed danger.
Not for the first time he knew a burning desire for
the formal education he had never had. In camp
he had listened, dragging out routine jobs in order
to overhear reports and the small talk of specialists
keen on their own particular hobbies. But so
much of the information Shann had thus picked up to
store in a retentive memory he had not understood and
could not fit together. It had been as if he were
trying to solve some highly important puzzle with
at least a quarter of the necessary pieces missing,
or with unrelated bits from others intermixed.
How much control did a trained animal scout have over
his furred or feathered assistants? And was part
of that mastery a mental rapport built up between
man and animal?
How well would the wolverines obey
him now, especially when they would not return to
camp where cages stood waiting as symbols of human
authority? Wouldn’t a trek into the wilderness
bring about a revolt for complete freedom? If
Shann could depend upon the animals, it would mean
a great deal. Not only would their superior hunting
ability provide all three with food, but their scouting
senses, so much keener than his, might erect a slender
wall between life and death.
Few large native beasts had been discovered
on Warlock by the Terran explorers. And of those
four or five different species, none had proved hostile
if unprovoked. But that did not mean that somewhere
back in the wild lands into which Shann was heading
there were no heretofore unknowns, perhaps slyer and
as vicious as the wolverines when they were aroused
to rage.
Then there were the “dreams,”
which had afforded the prime source of camp discussion
and dispute. Shann brushed coarse sand from his
boots and thought about the dreams. Did they
or did they not exist? You could start an argument
any time by making a definite statement for or against
the peculiar sort of dreaming reported by the first
scout to set ship on this world.
The Circe system, of which Warlock
was the second of three planets, had first been scouted
four years ago by one of those explorers traveling
solo in Survey service. Everyone knew that the
First-In Scouts were a weird breed, almost a mutation
of Terran stock their reports were rife
with strange observations.
So an alarming one concerning Circe
(a yellow sun such as Sol) and her three planets was
not so rare. Witch, the world nearest in orbit
to Circe, was too hot for human occupancy without
drastic and too costly world-changing. Wizard,
the third out from the sun, was mostly bare rock and
highly poisonous water. But Warlock, swinging
through space between two forbidding neighbors, seemed
to be just what the settlement board ordered.
Then the Survey scout, even in the
cocoon safety of his well-armed ship, began to dream.
And from those dreams a horror of the apparently empty
world developed, until he fled the planet to preserve
his sanity. There had been a second visit to
Warlock in check; worlds so well adapted to human
emigration could not be lightly thrown away. And
this time there was a negative report, no trace of
dreams, no registration of any outside influence on
the delicate and complicated equipment the ship carried.
So the Survey team had been dispatched to prepare for
the coming of the first pioneers, and none of them
had dreamed either at least, no more than
the ordinary dreams all men accepted.
Only there were those who pointed
out that the seasons had changed between the first
and second visits to Warlock. That first scout
had planeted in summer; his successors had come in
fall and winter. They argued that the final release
of the world for settlement should not be given until
the full year on Warlock had been sampled.
But the pressure of Emigrant Control
had forced their hands, that and the fear of just
what had eventually happened an attack from
the Throgs. So they had speeded up the process
of declaring Warlock open. Only Ragnar Thorvald
had protested that decision up to the last and had
gone back to headquarters on the supply ship a month
ago to make a last appeal for a more careful study.
Shann stopped brushing the sand from
the tough fabric above his knee. Ragnar Thorvald
... He remembered back to the port landing apron
on another world, remembered with a sense of loss
he could not define. That had been about the
second biggest day of his short life; the biggest had
come earlier when they had actually allowed him to
sign on for Survey duty.
He had tumbled off the cross-continent
cargo carrier, his kit a very meager kit slung
over his thin shoulder, a hot eagerness expanding
inside him until he thought that he could not continue
to throttle down that wild happiness. There was
a waiting starship. And he Shann Lantee
from the Dumps of Tyr, without any influence or schooling was
going to blast off in her, wearing the brown-green
uniform of Survey!
Then he had hesitated uncertainly,
had not quite dared cross the few feet of apron lying
between him and that compact group wearing the same
uniform with a slight difference, that of
service bars and completion badges and rank insignia with
the unconscious self-assurance of men who had done
this many times before.
But after a moment that whole group
had become in his own shy appraisal just a background
for one man. Shann had never before known in his
pinched and limited childhood, his lost boyhood, anyone
who aroused in him hero worship. And he could
not have put a name to the new emotion that added
so suddenly to his burning desire to make good, not
only to hold the small niche in Survey which he had
already so painfully achieved, but to climb, until
he could stand so in such a group talking easily to
that tall man, his uncovered head bronze-yellow in
the sunlight, his cool gray eyes pale in his brown
face.
Not that any of those wild dreams
born in that minute or two had been realized in the
ensuing months. Probably those dreams had always
been as wild as the ones reported by the first scout
on Warlock. Shann grinned wryly now at the short
period of childish hope and half-confidence that he
could do big things. Only one Thorvald had ever
noticed Shann’s existence in the Survey camp,
and that had been Garth.
Garth Thorvald, a far less impressive one
could say “smudged” copy of
his brother. Swaggering with an arrogance Ragnar
never showed, Garth was a cadet on his first mission,
intent upon making Shann realize the unbridgeable
gulf between a labor hand and an officer-to-be.
He had appeared to know right from their first meeting
just how to make Shann’s life a misery.
Now, in this slit of valley well away
from the domes, Shann’s fists balled. He
pounded them against the earth in a way he had so often
hoped to plant them on Garth’s smoothly handsome
face, his well-muscled body. One didn’t
survive the Dumps of Tyr without learning how to use
fists, and boots, and a list of tricks they didn’t
teach in any academy. He had always been sure
that he could take Garth if they mixed it up.
But if he had loosed the tight rein he had kept on
his temper and offered that challenge, he would have
lost his chance with Survey. Garth had proved
himself able to talk his way out of any scrape, even
minor dérélictions of duty, and he far out-ranked
Shann. The laborer from Tyr had had to swallow
all that the other could dish out and hope that on
his next assignment he would not be a member of young
Thorvald’s team. Though, because of Garth
Thorvald, Shann’s toll of black record marks
had mounted dangerously high and each day the chance
for any more duty tours had grown dimmer.
Shann laughed, and the sound was ugly.
That was one thing he didn’t have to worry about
any longer. There would be no other assignments
for him, the Throgs had seen to that. And Garth
... well, there would never be a showdown between
them now. He stood up. The Throg ship had
disappeared; they could push on.
He found a break in the cliff wall
which was climbable, and he coaxed the wolverines
after him. When they stood on the heights from
which the falls tumbled, Taggi and Togi rubbed against
him, cried for his attention. They, too, appeared
to need the reassurance they got from contact with
him, for they were also fugitives on this alien world,
the only representatives of their kind.
Since he did not have any definite
goal in view, Shann continued to be guided by the
stream, following its wanderings across a plateau.
The sun was warm, so he carried his jacket slung across
one shoulder. Taggi and Togi ranged ahead, twice
catching skitterers, which they devoured voraciously.
A shadow on a sun-baked rock sent the Terran skidding
for cover until he saw that it was cast by one of
the questing falcons from the upper peaks. But
that shook his confidence, so he again sought cover,
ashamed at his own carelessness.
In the late afternoon he reached the
far end of the plateau, faced a climb to peaks which
still bore cones of snow, now tinted a soft peach
by the sun. Shann studied that possible path and
distrusted his own powers to take it without proper
equipment or supplies. He must turn either north
or south, though he would then have to abandon a sure
water supply in the stream. Tonight he would
camp where he was. He had not realized how tired
he was until he found a likely half-cave in the mountain
wall and crawled in. There was too much danger
in fire here; he would have to do without that first
comfort of his kind.
Luckily, the wolverines squeezed in
beside him to fill the hole. With their warm
furred bodies sandwiching him, Shann dozed, awoke,
and dozed again, listening to night sounds the
screams, cries, hunting calls, of the Warlock wilds.
Now and again one of the wolverines whined and moved
uneasily.
Fingers of sun picked at Shann through
a shaft among the rocks, striking his eyes. He
moved, blinked blearily awake, unable for the first
few seconds to understand why the smooth plasta
wall of his bunk had become rough red stone.
Then he remembered. He was alone and he threw
himself frantically out of the cave, afraid the wolverines
had wandered off. Only both animals were busy
clawing under a boulder with a steady persistence
which argued there was a purpose behind that effort.
A sharp sting on the back of one hand
made that purpose only too clear to Shann, and he
retreated hurriedly from the vicinity of the excavation.
They had found an earth-wasp’s burrow and were
hunting grubs, naturally arousing the rightful inhabitants
to bitter resentment.
Shann faced the problem of his own
breakfast. He had had the immunity shots given
to all members of the team, and he had eaten game brought
in by exploring parties and labeled “safe.”
But how long he could keep to the varieties of native
food he knew was uncertain. Sooner or later he
must experiment for himself. Already he drank
the stream water without the aid of purifiers, and
so far there had been no ill results from that necessary
recklessness. Now the stream suggested fish.
But instead he chanced upon another water inhabitant
which had crawled up on land for some obscure purpose
of its own. It was a sluggish scaled thing, an
easy victim to his club, with thin, weak legs it could
project at will from a finned and armor-plated body.
Shann offered the head and guts to
Togi, who had abandoned the wasp nest. She sniffed
in careful investigation and then gulped. Shann
built a small fire and seared the firm greenish flesh.
The taste was flat, lacking salt, but the food eased
his emptiness. Enheartened, he started south,
hoping to find water sometime during the morning.
By noon he had his optimism justified
with the discovery of a spring, and the wolverines
had brought down a slender-legged animal whose coat
was close in shade to the dusky purple of the vegetation.
Smaller than a Terran deer, its head bore, not horns,
but a ridge of stiffened hair rising in a point some
twelve inches about the skull dome. Shann haggled
off some ragged steaks while the wolverines feasted
in earnest, carefully burying the head afterward.
It was when Shann knelt by the spring
pool to wash that he caught the clamor of the clak-claks.
He had seen or heard nothing of the flyers since he
had left the lake valley. But from the noise now
rising in an earsplitting volume, he thought there
was a sizable colony near-by and that the inhabitants
were thoroughly aroused.
He crept on his hands and knees to
near-by brush cover, heading toward the source of
that outburst. If the claks were announcing a
Throg scouting party, he wanted to know it.
Lying flat, with branches forming
a screen over him, the Terran gazed out on a stretch
of grassland which sloped at a fairly steep angle to
the south and which must lead to a portion of countryside
well below the level he was now traversing.
The clak-claks were skimming back
and forth, shrieking their staccato war cries.
Following the erratic dashes of their flight formation,
Shann decided that whatever they railed against was
on the lower level, out of his sight from that point.
Should he simply withdraw, since the disturbance was
not near him? Prudence dictated that; yet still
he hesitated.
He had no desire to travel north,
or to try and scale the mountains. No, south
was his best path, and he should be very sure that
route was closed before he retreated.
Since any additional fuss the clak-claks
might make on sighting him would be undistinguished
in their now general clamor, the Terran crawled on
to where tall grass provided a screen at the top of
the slope. There he stopped short, his hands
digging into the earth in sudden braking action.
Below, the ground steamed from a rocket
flare-back, grasses burned away from the fins of a
small scoutship. But even as Shann rose to one
knee, his shout of welcome choked in his throat.
One of those fins sank, canting the ship crookedly,
preventing any new take-off. And over the crown
of a low hill to the west swung the ominous black plate
of a Throg flyer.
The Throg ship came up in a burst
of speed, and Shann waited tensely for some countermove
from the scout. Those small speedy Terran ships
were prudently provided with weapons triply deadly
in proportion to their size. He was sure that
the Terran ship could hold its own against the Throg,
even eliminate the enemy. But there was no fire
from the slanting pencil of the scout. The Throg
circled warily, obviously expecting a trap. Twice
it darted back in the direction from which it had come.
As it returned from its second retreat, another of
its kind showed, a black coin dot against the amber
of the sky.
Shann felt sick inside. Now the
Terran scout had lost any advantage and perhaps all
hope. The Throgs could box the other in, cut the
downed ship to pieces with their energy beams.
He wanted to crawl away and not witness this last
disaster for his kind. But some stubborn core
of will kept him where he was.
The Throgs began to circle while beneath
them the flock of clak-claks screamed and dived at
the slanting nose of the Terran ship. Then that
same slashing energy he had watched quarter the camp
snapped from the far plate across the stricken scout.
The man who had piloted her, if not dead already (which
might account for the lack of defense), must have
fallen victim to that. But the Throg was going
to make very sure. The second flyer halted, remaining
poised long enough to unleash a second bolt dazzling
any watching eyes and broadcasting a vibration to make
Shann’s skin crawl when the last faint ripple
reached his lookout post.
What happened then the overconfident
Throg was not prepared to take. Shann cried out,
burying his face on his arm, as pinwheels of scarlet
light blotted out normal sight. There was an explosion,
a deafening blast. He cowered, blind, unable
to hear. Then, rubbing at his eyes, he tried
to see what had happened.
Through watery blurs he made out the
Throg ship, not swinging now in serene indifference
to Warlock’s gravity, but whirling end over end
across the sky as might a leaf tossed in a gust of
wind. Its rim caught against a rust-red cliff,
it rebounded and crumpled. Then it came down,
smashing perhaps half a mile away from the smoking
crater in which lay the mangled wreckage of the Terran
ship. The disabled scout pilot must have played
a last desperate game, making of his ship bait for
a trap.
The Terran had taken one Throg with
him. Shann rubbed again at his eyes, just barely
able to catch a glimpse of the second ship flashing
away westward. Perhaps it was only his impaired
sight, but it appeared to him that the Throg followed
an erratic path, either as if the pilot feared to
be caught by a second shot, or because that ship had
also suffered some injury.
Acid smoke wreathed up from the valley
making Shann retch and cough. There could be
no survivor from the Terran scout, and he did not believe
that any Throg had lived to crawl free of the crumpled
plate. But there would be other beetles swarming
here soon. They would not dare to leave the scene
unsearched. He wondered about that scout.
Had the pilot been aiming for the Survey camp, the
absence of any rider beam from there warning him off
so that he made the detour which brought him here?
Or had the Throgs tried to blast the Terran ship in
the upper atmosphere, crippling it, making this a
forced landing? But at least this battle had
cost the Throgs, settling a small portion of the Terran
debt for the lost camp.
The length of time between Shann’s
sighting of the grounded ship and the attack by the
Throgs had been so short that he had not really developed
any strong hope of rescue to be destroyed by the end
of the crippled ship. On the other hand, seeing
the Throgs take a beating had exploded his subconscious
acceptance of their superiority. He might not
have even the resources of a damaged scout at his
command. But he did have Taggi, Togi, and his
own brain. Since he was fated to permanent exile
on Warlock, there might just be some way to make the
beetles pay for that.
He licked his lips. Real action
against the aliens would take a lot of planning.
Shann would have to know more about what made a Throg
a Throg, more than all the wild stories he had heard
over the years. There had to be some way
a Terran could move effectively against a beetle-head.
And he had a lot of time, maybe the rest of his life
to work out a few answers. That Throg ship lying
wrecked at the foot of the cliff ... perhaps he could
do a little investigating before any rescue squad
arrived. Shann decided such a move was worth the
try and whistled to the wolverines.