There were patches of light in the
inner valley marking the phosphorescent plants, some
creeping at ground level, others tall as saplings.
On other nights Shann had welcomed that wan radiance,
but now he lay in as relaxed a position as possible,
marking each of those potential betrayers as he tried
to counterfeit the attitude of sleep and at the same
time plan out his route.
He had purposely settled in a pool
of shadow, the wolverines beside him. And he
thought that the bulk of the animal’s bodies
would cover his own withdrawal when the time came
to move. One arm lying limply across his middle
was in reality clutching to him an intricate arrangement
of small hide straps which he had made by sacrificing
most of the remainder of his painfully acquired thongs.
The trap must be set in place soon!
Now that he had charted a path to
the crucial point avoiding all light plants, Shann
was ready to move. The Terran pressed his hand
on Taggi’s head in the one imperative command
the wolverine was apt to obey the order
to stay where he was.
Shann sat up and gave the same voiceless
instruction to Togi. Then he inched out of the
hollow, a worm’s progress to that narrow way
along the cliff top the path which anyone
or anything coming up from that sea gate on the beach
would have to pass in order to witness the shoreline
occupied by the half-built outrigger.
So much of his plan was based upon
luck and guesses, but those were all Shann had.
And as he worked at the stretching of his snare, the
Terran’s heart pounded, and he tensed at every
sound out of the night. Having tested all the
anchoring of his net, he tugged at a last knot, and
then crouched to listen not only with his ears, but
with all his strength of mind and body.
Pound of waves, whistle of wind, the
sleepy complaint of some bird.... A regular splashing!
One of the fish in the lagoon? Or what he awaited?
The Terran retreated as noiselessly as he had come,
heading for the hollow where he had bedded down.
He reached there breathless, his heart
pumping, his mouth dry as if he had been racing.
Taggi stirred and thrust a nose inquiringly against
Shann’s arm. But the wolverine made no sound,
as if he, too, realized that some menace lay beyond
the rim of the valley. Would that other come
up the path Shann had trapped? Or had he been
wrong? Was the enemy already stalking him from
the other beach? The grip of his stunner was
slippery in his damp hand; he hated this waiting.
The canoe ... his work on it had been
a careless botching. Better to have the job done
right. Why, it was perfectly clear now how he
had been mistaken! His whole work plan was wrong;
he could see the right way of doing things laid out
as clear as a blueprint in his mind. A picture
in his mind!
Shann stood up and both wolverines
moved uneasily, though neither made a sound.
A picture in his mind! But this time he wasn’t
asleep; he wasn’t dreaming a dream to
be used for his own defeat. Only (that other could
not know this) the pressure which had planted the idea
of new work to be done in his mind an idea
one part of him accepted as fact had not
taken warning from his move. He was supposed to
be under control; the Terran was sure of that.
All right, so he would play that part. He must
if he would entice the trapper into his trap.
He holstered his stunner, walked out
into the open, paying no heed now to the patches of
light through which he must pass on his way to the
path his own feet had already worn to the boat beach.
As he went, Shann tried to counterfeit what he believed
would be the gait of a man under compulsion.
Now he was on the rim fronting the
downslope, fighting against his desire to turn and
see for himself if anything had climbed behind.
The canoe was all wrong, a bad job which he must make
better at once so that in the morning he would be
free of this island prison.
The pressure of that other’s
will grew stronger. And the Terran read into
that the overconfidence which he believed would be
part of the enemy’s character. The one
who was sending him to destroy his own work had no
suspicion that the victim was not entirely malleable,
ready to be used as he himself would use a knife or
a force ax. Shann strode steadily downslope.
With a small spurt of fear he knew that in a way that
unseen other was right; the pressure was taking over,
even though he was awake this time. The Terran
tried to will his hand to his stunner, but his fingers
fell instead on the hilt of his knife. He drew
the blade as panic seethed in his head, chilling him
from within. He had underestimated the other’s
power....
And that panic flared into open fight,
making him forget his careful plans. Now he must
wrench free from this control. The knife was moving
to slash a hide lashing, directed by his hand, but
not his will.
A soundless gasp, a flash of dismay
rocked him, but neither was his gasp nor his dismay.
That pressure snapped off; he was free. But the
other wasn’t! Knife still in fist, Shann
turned and ran upslope, his torch in his other hand.
He could see a shape now writhing, fighting, outlined
against a light bush. And, fearing that the stranger
might win free and disappear, the Terran spotlighted
the captive in the beam, reckless of Throg or enemy
reinforcements.
The other crouched, plainly startled
by the sudden burst of light. Shann stopped abruptly.
He had not really built up any mental picture of what
he had expected to find in his snare, but this prisoner
was as weirdly alien to him as a Throg. The light
on the torch was reflected off a skin which glittered
as if scaled, glittered with the brilliance of jewels
in bands and coils of color spreading from the throat
down the chest, spiraling about upper arms, around
waist and thighs, as if the stranger wore a treasure
house of gems as part of a living body. Except
for those patterned loops, coils, and bands, the body
had no clothing, though a belt about the slender middle
supported a pair of pouches and some odd implements
held in loops.
Roughly the figure was more humanoid
than the Throgs. The upper limbs were not too
unlike Shann’s arms, though the hands had four
digits of equal length instead of five. But the
features were nonhuman, closer to saurian in contour.
It had large eyes, blazing yellow in the dazzle of
the flash, with vertical slits of green for pupils.
A nose united with the jaw to make a snout, and above
the domed forehead a sharp V-point of raised spiky
growth extended back and down until behind the shoulder
blades it widened and expanded to resemble a pair of
wings.
The captive no longer struggled, but
sat quietly in the tangle of the snare Shann had set,
watching the Terran steadily as if there were no difficulty
in seeing through the brilliance of the beam to the
man who held it. And, oddly enough, Shann experienced
no repulsion toward its reptilian appearance as he
had upon first sighting the beetle-Throg. On
impulse he put down his torch on a rock and walked
into the light to face squarely the thing out of the
sea.
Still eying Shann, the captive raised
one limb and gave an absent-minded tug to the belt
it wore. Shann, noting that gesture, was struck
by a wild surmise, leading him to study the prisoner
more narrowly. Allowing for the alien structure
of bone, the nonhuman skin; this creature was delicate,
graceful, in its way beautiful, with a fragility of
limb which backed up his suspicions. Moved by
no pressure from the other, but by his own will and
sense of fitness, Shann stooped to cut the control
line of his snare.
The captive continued to watch as
Shann sheathed his blade and then held out his hand.
Yellow eyes, never blinking since his initial appearance,
regarded him, not with any trace of fear or dismay,
but with a calm measurement which was curiosity based
upon a strong belief in its own superiority.
He did not know how he knew, but Shann was certain
that the creature out of the sea was still entirely
confident, that it made no fight because it did not
conceive of any possible danger from him. And
again, oddly enough, he was not irritated by this unconscious
arrogance; rather he was intrigued and amused.
“Friends?” Shann used
the basic galactic speech devised by Survey and the
Free Traders, semantics which depended upon the proper
inflection of voice and tone to project meaning when
the words were foreign.
The other made no sound, and the Terran
began to wonder if his captive had any audible form
of speech. He withdrew a step or two then pulled
at the snare, drawing the cords away from the creature’s
slender ankles. Rolling the thongs into a ball,
he tossed the crude net back over his shoulder.
“Friends?” he repeated
again, showing his empty hands, trying to give that
one word the proper inflection, hoping the other could
read his peaceful intent in his features if not by
his speech.
In one lithe, flowing movement the
alien arose. Fully erect, the Warlockian had
a frail appearance. Shann, for his breed, was
not tall. But the native was still smaller, not
more than five feet, that stiff V of head crest just
topping Shann’s shoulder. Whether any of
those fittings at its belt could be a weapon the Terran
had no way of telling. However, the other made
no move to draw any of them.
Instead, one of the four-digit hands
came up. Shann felt the feather touch of strange
finger tips on his chin, across his lips, up his cheek,
to at last press firmly on his forehead at a spot just
between the eyebrows. What followed was communication
of a sort, not in words or in any describable flow
of thoughts. There was no feeling of enmity at
least nothing strong enough to be called that.
Curiosity, yes, and then a growing doubt, not of the
Terran himself, but of the other’s preconceived
ideas concerning him. Shann was other than the
native had judged him, and the stranger was disturbed,
that self-confidence a little ruffled. And also
Shann was right in his guess. He smiled, his
amusement growing not aimed at his companion
on this cliff top, but at himself. For he was
dealing with a woman, a very young woman, and someone
as fully feminine in her way as any human girl could
be.
“Friends?” he asked for the third time.
But the other still exuded a wariness,
a wariness mixed with surprise. And the tenuous
message which passed between them then astounded Shann.
To this Warlockian out of the night he was not following
the proper pattern of male behaviour at all; he should
have been in awe of the other merely because of her
sex. A diffidence rather than an assumption of
equality should have colored his response, judged by
her standards. At first, he caught a flash of
anger at this preposterous attitude of his; then her
curiosity won, but there was still no reply to his
question.
The finger tips no longer made contact
between them. Stepping back, her hands now reached
for one of the pouches at her belt. Shann watched
that movement carefully. And because he did not
trust her too far, he whistled.
Her head came up. She might be
dumb, but plainly she was not deaf. And she gazed
down into the hollow as the wolverines answered his
summons with growls. Her profile reminded Shann
of something for an instant; but it should have been
golden-yellow instead of silver with two jeweled patterns
ringing the snout. Yes, that small plaque he had
seen in the cabin of one of the ship’s officers.
A very old Terran legend “Dragon,”
the officer had named the creature. Only that
one had possessed a serpent’s body, a lizard’s
legs and wings.
Shann gave a sudden start, aware his
thoughts had made him careless, or had she in some
way led him into that bypath of memory for her own
purposes? Because now she held some object in
the curve of her curled fingers, regarding him with
those unblinking yellow eyes. Eyes ... eyes....
Shann dimly heard the alarm cry of the wolverines.
He tried to snap draw his stunner, but it was too
late.
There was a haze about him hiding
the rocks, the island valley with its radiant plants,
the night sky, the bright beam of the torch. Now
he moved through that haze as one walks through a
dream approaching nightmare, striding with an effort
as if wading through a deterring flood. Sound,
sight one after another those senses were
taken from him. Desperately Shann held to one
thing, his own sense of identity. He was Shann
Lantee, Terran breed, out of Tyr, of the Survey Service.
Some part of him repeated those facts with vast urgency
against an almost overwhelming force which strove
to defeat that awareness of self, making him nothing
but a tool or a weapon for another’s
use.
The Terran fought, soundlessly but
fiercely, on a battleground which was within him,
knowing in a detached way that his body obeyed another’s
commands.
“I am Shann ”
he cried without audible speech. “I am myself.
I have two hands, two legs.... I think for myself!
I am a man”
And to that came an answer of sorts,
a blow of will striking at his resistance, a will
which struggled to drown him before ebbing, leaving
behind it a faint suggestion of bewilderment, of a
dawn of concern.
“I am a man!” he
hurled that assertion as he might have thrust deep
with one of the crude spears he had used against the
Throgs. For against what he faced now his weapons
were as crude as spears fronting blasters. “I
am Shann Lantee, Terran, man....” Those
were facts; no haze could sweep them from his mind
or take away that heritage.
And again there was the lightening
of the pressure, the slight recoil, which could only
be a prelude to another assault upon his last stronghold.
He clutched his three facts to him as a shield, groping
for others which might have afforded a weapon of rebuttal.
Dreams, these Warlockians dealt in
and through dreams. And the opposite of dreams
are facts! His name, his breed, his sex these
were facts. And Warlock itself was a fact.
The earth under his boots was a fact. The water
which washed around the island was a fact. The
air he breathed was a fact. Flesh, blood, bones facts,
all of them. Now he was a struggling identity
imprisoned in a rebel body. But that body was
real. He tried to feel it. Blood pumped
from his heart, his lungs filled and emptied; he struggled
to feel those processes.
With a terrifying shock, the envelope
which had held him vanished. Shann was choking,
struggling in water. He flailed out with his arms,
kicked his legs. One hand grated painfully against
stone. Hardly knowing what he did, but fighting
for his life, Shann caught at that rock and drew his
head out of water. Coughing and gasping, half
drowned, he was weak with the panic of his close brush
with death.
For a long moment he could only cling
to the rock which had saved him, retching and dazed,
as the water washed about his body, a current tugging
at his trailing legs. There was light of a sort
here, patches of green which glowed with the same
subdued light as the bushes of the outer world, for
he was no longer under the night sky. A rock-roof
was but inches over his head; he must be in some cave
or tunnel under the surface of the sea. Again
a gust of panic shook him as he felt trapped.
The water continued to pull at Shann,
and in his weakened condition it was a temptation
to yield to that pull; the more he fought it the more
he was exhausted. At last the Terran turned on
his back, trying to float with the stream, sure he
could no longer battle it.
Luckily those few inches of space
above the surface of the water continued, and he had
air to breathe. But the fear of that ending, of
being swept under the surface, chewed at his nerves.
And his bodily danger burned away the last of the
spell which had held him, brought him into this place,
wherever it might be.
Was it only his heightened imagination,
or had the current grown swifter? Shann tried
to gauge the speed of his passage by the way the patches
of green light slipped by. Now he turned and began
to swim slowly, feeling as if his arms were leaden
weights, his ribs a cage to bind his aching lungs.
Another patch of light ... larger
... spreading across the roof over head. Then,
he was out! Out of the tunnel into a cavern so
vast that its arching roof was like a skydome far
above his head. But here the patches of light
were brighter, and they were arranged in odd groups
which had a familiar look to them.
Only, better than freedom overhead,
there was a shore not too distant. Shann swam
for that haven, summoning up the last rags of his strength,
knowing that if he could not reach it very soon he
was finished. Somehow he made it and lay gasping,
his cheek resting on sand finer than any of the outer
world, his fingers digging into it for purchase to
drag his body on. But when he collapsed, his
legs were still awash in water.
No footfall could be heard on that
sand. But he knew that he was no longer alone.
He braced his hands and with painful effort levered
up his body. Somehow he made it to his knees,
but he could not stand. Instead he half tumbled
back, so that he faced them from a sitting position.
Them there were
three of them the dragon-headed ones with
their slender, jewel-set bodies glittering even in
this subdued light, their yellow eyes fastened on
him with a remoteness which did not approach any human
emotion, save perhaps that of a cold and limited wonder.
But behind them came a fourth, one he knew by the
patterns on her body.
Shann clasped his hands about his
knees to still the trembling of his body, and eyed
them back with all the defiance he could muster.
Nor did he doubt that he had been brought here, his
body as captive to their will, as had been that of
their spy or messenger in his crude snare on the island.
“Well, you have me,” he said hoarsely.
“Now what?”
His words boomed weirdly out over
the water, were echoed from the dim outer reaches
of the cavern. There was no answer. They
merely stood watching him. Shann stiffened, determined
to hold to his defiance and to that identity which
he now knew was his weapon against the powers they
used.
The one who had somehow drawn him
there moved at last, circling around the other three
with a suggestion of diffidence in her manner.
Shann jerked back his head as her hand stretched to
touch his face. And then, guessing that she sought
her peculiar form of communication, he submitted to
her finger tips, though now his skin crawled under
that light but firm pressure and he shrank from the
contract.
There were no sensations this time.
To his amazement a concrete inquiry shaped itself
in his brain, as clear as if the question had been
asked aloud: “Who are you?”
“Shann....” he began vocally,
and then turned words into thoughts. “Shann
Lantee, Terran, man.” He made his answer
the same which had kept him from succumbing to their
complete domination.
“Name Shann Lantee,
man yes.” The other accepted
those, “Terran?” That was a question.
Did these people have any notion of
space travel? Could they understand the concept
of another world holding intelligent beings?
“I come from another world....”
He tried to make a clean-cut picture in his mind a
globe in space, a ship blasting free....
“Look!” The fingers still
rested between his eyebrows, but with her other hand
the Warlockian was pointing up to the dome of the cavern.
Shann followed her order. He
studied those patches of light which had seemed so
vaguely familiar at his first sighting, studying them
closely to know them for what they were. A star
map! A map of the heavens as they could be seen
from the outer crust of Warlock.
“Yes, I come from the stars,”
he answered, booming with his voice.
The fingers dropped from his forehead;
the scaled head swung around to exchange glances,
which were perhaps some unheard communication with
the other three. Then the hand was extended again.
“Come!”
Fingers fell from his head to his
right wrist, closing there with surprising strength;
and some of that strength together with a new energy
flowed from them into him, so that he found and kept
his feet as the other drew him up.