The only speaking Locklear did was to the comm set in his ear, shoving its pushbutton switch. The Kzin looked back at him in curiosity once or twice, but now he was speaking Interworld, and perhaps Stalwart thought he was singing a death song.
In a way, it was true—though not a song of his own death, if he could help it. “Locklear calling the Anthony Wayne,” he said, and paused.
He heard the voice of Grace Agostinho reply, “Recording.”
“They’ve caught me already, and they intend to kill me. I don’t much like you bastards, but at least you’re human. I don’t care how many of the male tabbies you bag; when they start torturing me I won’t be any further use to you.”
Again, Grace’s voice replied in his ear: “Recording.”
Now with a terrible suspicion, Locklear said, “Is anybody there? If you’re monitoring me live, say ‘monitoring.’”
His comm set, in Grace’s voice, only said, “Recording.”
Locklear flicked off the switch and began to walk even more slowly, until Stalwart tugged hard on the leash. Any Kzin who cared to look, as they re-entered the village, would have seen a little man bereft of hope. He did not complain when Stalwart retied his hands, nor even when another Kzin marched him away and fairly flung him into a tiny hut near the edge of the village. Eventually they flung a bloody hunk of some recent kill into his hut, but it was raw and, with his hands tied behind him, he could not have held it to his mouth.
Nor could he toggle his comm set, assuming it would carry past the roof thatch. He had not said he would be in the village, and they would very likely kill him along with everybody else in the village when they came. If they came.
He felt as though he would drown in cold waves of despair. A vicious priesthood had killed his friends and, even if he escaped for a time, he would be hunted down by the galaxy’s most pitiless hunters. And if his own kind rescued him, they might cheerfully beat him to death trying to learn a secret he had already divulged. And even the gentle Neanderthalers hated him, now.
Why not just give up? I don’t know why, he admitted to himself, and began to search for something to help him fray the thongs at his wrists. He finally chose a rough-barked post, sitting down in front of it and staring toward the Kzin male whose lower legs he could see beneath the door matting.
He rubbed until his wrists were as raw as that meat lying in the dust before him. Then he rubbed until his muscles refused to continue, his arms cramping horribly. By that time it was dark, and he kept falling into an exhausted, fitful sleep, starting to scratch at his bonds every time a cramp woke him. The fifth time he awoke, it was to the sounds of scratching again. And a soft, distant call outside, which his guard answered just as softly. It took Locklear a moment to realize that those scratching noises were not being made by him.
The scratching became louder, filling him with a dread of the unknown in the utter blackness of the Kzersatz night. Then he heard a scrabble of clods tumbling to the earthen floor. Low, urgent, in the fitz-rowr of a female Kzin: “Rockear, quickly! Help widen this hole!”
He wanted to shout, remembering Boots, the new mother of two who had scorned her tribe; but he whispered hoarsely: “Boots?”
An even more familiar voice than that of Boots. “She is entertaining your guard. Hurry!”
“Kit! I can’t, my hands are tied,” he groaned. “Kit, they said you were drowned.”
“Idiots,” said the familiar voice, panting as she worked. A very faint glow preceded the indomitable Kit, who had a modern Kzin beltpac and used its glowlamp for brief moments. Without slowing her frantic pace, she said softly, “They built a walkway into the lake and—dropped me from it. But my mate, your friend Scarface, knew what they intended. He told me to breathe—many times just before I fell. With all the stones—weighting me down, I simply walked on the bottom, between the pilings—and untied the stones beneath the planks near shore. Idiots,” she said again, grunting as her fearsome claws ripped away another chunk of Kzersatz soil. Then, “Poor Rockear,” she said, seeing him writhe toward her.
In another minute, with the glowlamp doused, Locklear heard the growling curses of Kit’s passage into the hut. She’d said females were good tunnelers, but not until now had he realized just how good. The nearest cover must be a good ten meters away…“Jesus, don’t bite my hand, Kit,” he begged, feeling her fangs and the heat of her breath against his savaged wrists. A moment later he felt a flash of white-hot pain through his shoulders as his hands came free. He’d been cramped up so long it hurt to move freely. “Well, by God it’ll just have to hurt,” he said aloud to himself, and flexed his arms, groaning.
“I suppose you must hold to my tail,” she said. He felt the long, wondrously luxuriant tail whisk across his chest and, because it was totally dark, did as she told him. Nothing short of true and abiding friendship, he knew, would provoke her into such manhandling of her glorious, her sensual, her fundamental tail.
They scrambled past mounds of soft dirt until Locklear felt cool night air on his face. “You may quit insulting my tail now,” Kit growled. “We must wait inside this tunnel awhile. You take this: I do not use it well.”
He felt the cold competence of the object in his hand and exulted as he recognized it as a modern Kzin sidearm. Crawling near with his face at her shoulder, he said, “How’d you know exactly where I was?”
“Your little long-talker, of course. We could hear you moaning and panting in there, and the magic tools of my mate located you.”
But I didn’t have it turned on. Ohhh-no; I didn’t KNOW it was turned on! The goddamned thing is transmitting all the time…He decided to score one for Stockton’s people, and dug the comm set from his ear. Still in the tunnel, it wouldn’t transmit well until he moved outside. Crush it? Bury it? Instead, he snapped the magazine from the sidearm and, after removing its ammunition, found that the tiny comm set would fit inside. Completely enclosed by metal, the comm set would transmit no more until he chose.
He got all but three of the rounds back in the magazine, cursing every sound he made, and then moved next to Kit again. “They showed me what they did to Scarface. I can’t tell you how sorry I am, Kit. He was my friend, and they will pay for it.”
“Oh, yes, they will pay,” she hissed softly. “Make no mistake, he is still your friend.”
A thrill of energy raced from the base of his skull down his arms and legs. “You’re telling me he’s alive?”
As if to save her the trouble of a reply, a male Kzin called softly from no more than three paces away: “Milady; do we have him?”
“Yes,” Kit replied.
“Scarface! Thank God you’re—”
“Not now,” said the one-time warship commander. “Follow quietly.”
Having slept near Kit for many weeks, Locklear recognized her steam-kettle hiss as a sufferer’s sigh. “I know your nose is hopeless at following a spoor, Rockear. But try not to pull me completely apart this time.” Again he felt that long bushy tail pass across his breast, but this time he tried to grip it more gently as they sped off into the night.
Sitting deep in a cave with rough furniture and booby-trapped tunnels, Locklear wolfed stew under the light of a Kzin glowlamp. He had slightly scandalized Kit with a hug, then did the same to Boots as the young mother entered the cave without her kittens. The guard would never be trusted to guard anything again, said the towering Scarface, but that rescue tunnel was proof that a Kzin had helped. Now they’d be looking for Boots, thinking she had done more than lure a guard thirty meters away.
Locklear told his tale of success, failure, and capture by human pirates as he finished eating, then asked for an update of the Kzersatz problem. Kit, it turned out, had warned Scarface against taking the priests from stasis but one of the devout and not entirely bright males they woke had done the deed anyway.
Scarface, with his small hidden cache of modern equipment, had expected to lead; had he not been Tzak-Commander, once upon a time? The priests had seemed to agree
—long enough to make sure they could coerce enough followers. It seemed, said Scarface, that ancient Kzin priests hadn’t the slightest compunctions about lying, unlike modern Kzinti. He had tried repeatedly to call Locklear with his all-band comm set, without success. Depending on long custom, demanding that tradition take precedence over new ways, the priests had engineered the capture of Scarface and Kit in a hook-net, the kind of cruel device that tore at the victim’s flesh at the slightest movement.
Villagers had spent days in building that walkway out over a shallowly sloping lake, a labor of loathing for Kzinti who hated to soak in water. Once it was extended to the point where the water was four meters deep, the rough-hewn dock made an obvious reminder of ceremonial murder to any female who might try, as Kit and Boots had done ages before, to liberate herself from the ritual prostitution of yore.
And then, as additional mental torture, they told their bound captives what to expect, and made Scarface watch as Kit was thrown into the lake. Boots, watching in horror from afar, had then watched the torture and disposal of Scarface. She was amazed when Kit appeared at her birthing bower, having seen her disappear with great stones into deep water. The next day, Kit had killed a big ruminant, climbing that tree at night to recover her mate and placing half of her kill in the net.
“My medkit did the rest,” Scarface said, pointing to ugly scar tissue at several places on his big torso. “These scum have never seen anyone recover from deep body punctures. Antibiotics can be magic, if you stretch a point.”
Locklear mused silently on their predicament for long minutes. Then: “Boots, you can’t afford to hang around near the village anymore. You’ll have to hide your kittens and—”
“They have my kittens,” said Boots, with a glitter of pure hate in her eyes. “They will be cared for as long as I do not disturb the villagers.”
“Who told you that?”
“The high priest,” she said, mewling pitifully as she saw the glance of doubt pass between Locklear and Scarface. The priests were accomplished liars.
“We’d best get them back soon,” Locklear suggested. “Are you sure this cave is secure?”
Scarface took him halfway out one tunnel and, using the glowlamp, showed him a trap of horrifying simplicity. It was a grav polarizer unit from one of the biggest cages, buried just beneath the tunnel floor with a switch hidden to one side. If you reached to the side carefully and turned the switch off, that hidden grav unit wouldn’t hurl you against the roof of the tunnel as you walked over it. If you didn’t, it did. Simple. Terrible. “I like it,” Locklear smiled. “Any more tricks I’d better know before I plaster myself over your ceiling?”
There were, and Scarface showed them to him. “But the least energy expended, the least noise and alarm to do the job, the best. Instead of polarizers, we might bury some stasis units outside, perhaps at the entrance to their meeting hut. Then we catch those kshat priests, and use the lying scum for target practice.”
“Good idea, and we may be able to improve on it. How many units here in the cave?”
That was the problem; two stasis units taken from cages were not enough. They needed more from the crypt, said Locklear.
“They destroyed that little airboat you left me, but I built a better one,” Scarface said with a flicker of humor from his ears.
“So did I. Put a bunch of polarizers on it to push yourself around and ignored the sail, didn’t you?” He saw Scarface’s assent and winked.
“Two units might work if we trap the priests one by one,” Scarface hazarded. “But they’ve been meddling in the crypt. We might have to fight our way in. And you…” he hesitated.
“And I have fought better Kzinti before, and here I stand,” Locklear said simply.
“That you do.” They gripped hands, and then went back to set up their raid on the crypt. The night was almost done.
When surrendering, Scarface had told Locklear nothing of his equipment cache. With two sidearms he could have made life interesting for a man; interesting and short. But his word had been his bond, and now Locklear was damned glad to have the stuff.
They left the females to guard the cave. Flitting low across the veldt toward the stasis crypt with Scarface at his scooter controls, they planned their tactics. “I wonder why you didn’t start shooting those priests the minute you were back on your feet,” Locklear said over the whistle of breeze in their faces.
“The kittens,” Scarface explained. “I might kill one or two priests before the cowards hid and sent innocent fools to be shot, but they are perfectly capable of hanging a kitten in the village until I gave myself up. And I did not dare raid the crypt for stasis units without a warrior to back me up.”
“And I’ll have to do,” Locklear grinned.
“You will,” Scarface grinned back; a typical Kzin grin, all business, no pleasure.
They settled the scooter near the ice-rimmed force wall and moved according to plan, making haste slowly to avoid the slightest sound, the huge Kzin’s head swathed in a bandage of leaves that suggested a wound while—with luck—hiding his identity for a few crucial seconds.
Watching the Kzin warrior’s muscular body slide among weeds and rocks, Locklear realized that Scarface was still not fully recovered from his ordeal. He made his move before he was ready because of me, and I’m not even a Kzin. Wish I thought I could match that kind of commitment, Locklear mused as he took his place in front of Scarface at the crypt entrance. His sidearm was in his hand. Scarface had sworn the priests had no idea what the weapon was and, with this kind of ploy, Locklear prayed he was right. Scarface gripped Locklear by the neck then, but gently, and they marched in together expecting to meet a guard just inside the entrance.
No guard. No sound at all—and then a distant hollow slam, as of a great box closing. They split up then, moving down each side corridor, returning to the main shaft silently, exploring side corridors again. After four of these forays, they knew that no one would be at their backs.
Locklear was peering into the fifth when, glancing back, he saw Scarface’s gesture of caution. Scuffing steps down the side passage, a mumble in Kzin, then silence. Then Scarface resumed his hold on his friend’s neck and, after one mutual glance of worry, shoved Locklear into the side passage.
“Ho, see the beast I captured,” Scarface called, his voice booming in the wide passage, prompting exclamations from two surprised Kzin males.
Stasis cages lay in disarray, some open, some with transparent tops ripped off. One Kzin, with the breast scars and bandoliers of a priest, hopped off the cage he used as a seat, and placed a hand on the butt of his sharp wtsai. The other bore scabs on his breast and wore no bandolier. He had been tinkering with the innards of a small stasis cage, but whirled, jaw agape.
“It must have escaped after we left, yesterday,” said the priest, looking at the “captive,” then with fresh curiosity at Scarface. “And who are—”
At that instant, Locklear saw what levitated, spinning, inside one of the medium-sized cages; spinning almost too fast to identify. But Locklear knew what it had to be, and while the priest was staring hard at Scarface, the little man lost control.
His cry was in Interworld, not Kzin: “You filthy bastard!” Before the priest could react, a roundhouse right with the massive barrel of a Kzin pistol took away both upper and lower incisors from the left side of his mouth. Caught this suddenly, even a two hundred kilo Kzin could be sent reeling from the blow, and as the priest reeled to his right, Locklear kicked hard at his backside.
Scarface clubbed at the second Kzin, the corridor ringing with snarls and zaps of warrior rage. Locklear did not even notice, leaping on the back of the fallen priest, hacking with his gunbarrel until the wtsai flew from a smashed hand, kicking down with all his might against the back of the priest’s head. The priest, at least twice Locklear’s bulk, had lived a life much too soft, for far too long. He rolled over, eyes wide not in fear but in anger at this outrage from a puny beast. It is barely possible that
fear might have worked.
The priest caught Locklear’s boot in a mouthful of broken teeth, not seeing the sidearm as it swung at his temple. The thump was like an iron bar against a melon, the priest falling limp as suddenly as if some switch had been thrown.
Sobbing, Locklear dropped the pistol, grabbed handfuls of ear on each side, and pounded the priest’s head against cruel obsidian until he felt a heavy grip on his shoulder.
“He is dead, Locklear. Save your strength,” Scarface advised. As Locklear recovered his weapon and stumbled to his feet, he was shaking uncontrollably. “You must hate our kind more than I thought,” Scarface added, studying Locklear oddly.
“He wasn’t your kind. I would kill a man for the same crime,” Locklear said in fury, glaring at the second Kzin who squatted, bloody-faced, in a corner holding a forearm with an extra elbow in it. Then Locklear rushed to open the cage the priest had been watching.
The top levered back, and its occupant sank to the cage floor without moving. Scarface screamed his rage, turning toward the injured captive. “You experiment on tiny kittens? Shall we do the same to you now?”
Locklear, his tears flowing freely, lifted the tiny Kzin kitten—a male—in hands that were tender, holding it to his breast. “It’s breathing,” he said. “A miracle, after getting the centrifuge treatment in a cage meant for something far bigger.”
“Before I kill you, do something honorable,” Scarface said to the wounded one. “Tell me where the other kitten is.”
The captive pointed toward the end of the passage. “I am only an acolyte,” he muttered. “I did not enjoy following orders.”
Locklear sped along the cages and, at last, found Boot’s female kitten revolving slowly in a cage of the proper size. He realized from the prominence of the tiny ribs that the kitten would cry for milk when it waked. If it waked. “Is she still alive?”
“Yes,” the acolyte called back. “I am glad this happened. I can die with a less-troubled conscience.”
After a hurried agreement and some rough questioning, they gave the acolyte a choice. He climbed into a cage hidden behind others at the end of another corridor and was soon revolving in stasis. The kittens went into one small cage. Working feverishly against the time when another enemy might walk into the crypt, they disassembled several more stasis cages and toted the working parts to the scooter, then added the kitten cage and, barely, levitated the scooter with its heavy load.