“I don’t think they’d try anything against us if they did know about it. They need us to survive even more than we need them. But when—if—we ever find Urthona’s home, then we’d better watch our backs. What bothers me is that we may need the beamer for other things.”
He paused and stared past Anana’s head.
“Like them.”
She turned her head.
Silhouetted on top of a ridge about two miles away was a long line of moving objects. Even at this distance and in this light, she could see that they were a mixture of large animals and human beings.
“Natives,” he said.
CHAPTER FIVE
The three men had stopped and were looking suspiciously at them. When the two came up to them, Red Orc greeted them.
“What the hell are you two plotting?”
Kickaha laughed. “It’s sure nice traveling with you paranoiacs. We were discussing that,” and he pointed toward the ridge.
McKay groaned and said, “What next?”
Anana said, “Are all the natives hostile to strangers?”
“I don’t know,” Urthona said. “I do know that they all have very strong tribal feelings. I used to cruise around in my flier and observe them, and I never saw two tribes meet without conflict of some kind. But they have no territorial aggressions. How could they?”
Anana smiled at Urthona. “Well, Uncle, I wonder how they’d feel if you were introduced to them as the Lord of this world. The one who made this terrible place and abducted their ancestors from Earth.”
Urthona paled, but he said, “They’re used to this world. They don’t know any better.”
“Is their lifespan a thousand years, as on Jadawin’s world?”
“No. It’s about a hundred years, but they don’t suffer from disease.”
“They must see us,” Kickaha said. “Anyway, we’ll just keep on going in the same direction.”
They resumed their march, occasionally looking at the ridge. After two hours, the caravan disappeared over the other side. The ridge had not changed shape during that time. It was one of the areas in which topological mutation went at a slower rate.
“Night” came again. The bright red of the sky became streaked with darker bands, all horizontal, some broader than others. As the minutes passed, the bands enlarged and became even darker. When they had all merged, the sky was a uniform dull red, angry-looking, menacing.
They were on a flat plain extending as far as they could see. The mountains had disappeared, though whether because they had collapsed or because they were hidden in the darkness, they could not determine. They were not alone. Nearby, but out of reach, were thousands of animals: many types of antelopes, gazelles, a herd of the tuskless elephants in the distance, a small group of the giant moosoids.
Urthona said that there must also be big cats and wild dogs in the neighborhood. But the cats would be leaving, since they had no chance of catching prey on this treeless plain. There were smaller felines, a sort of cheetah, which could run down anything but the ostrich-like birds. None of these were in sight.
Kickaha had tried to walk very slowly up to the antelopes. He’d hoped they would not be alarmed enough to move out of arrow range. They didn’t cooperate.
Then, abruptly, a wild chittering swept down from some direction, and there was a stampede. Thousands of hooves evoked thunder from the plain. There was no dust; the greasy earth just did not dry enough for that, except when an area was undergoing a very swift change and the heat drove the moisture out of the surface.
Kickaha stood still while thousands of running or bounding beasts raced by him or even over him. Then, as the ranks thinned, he shot an arrow and skewered a gazelle. Anana, who’d been standing two hundred yards away, ran toward him, her beamer in hand. A moment later he saw why she was alarmed. The chittering noise got louder, and out of the darkness came a pack of long-legged baboons. These were truly quadrupedal, their front and back limbs of the same length, their “hands” in nowise differentiated from their “feet.”
They were big brutes, the largest weighing perhaps a hundred pounds. They sped by him, their mouths open, the wicked-looking canines dripping saliva. Then they were gone, a hundred or so, the babies clinging to the long hair on their mothers’ backs.
Kickaha sighed with relief as he watched the last merge into the darkness. According to Urthona, they would have no hesitation in attacking humans under certain conditions. Fortunately, when they were chasing the antelopes, they were single-minded. But if they had no success, they might return to try their luck with the group.
Kickaha used his knife to cut up the gazelle. Orc said, “I’m getting sick of eating raw meat! I’m very hungry, but just thinking about that bloody mess makes my stomach boil with acid!”
Kickaha, grinning, offered him a dripping cut.
“You could become a vegetarian. Nuts to the nuts, fruits to the fruits, and a big raspberry to you.”
McKay, grimacing, said, “I don’t like it either. I keep feeling like the stuff’s alive. It tries to crawl back up my throat.”
“Try one of these kidneys,” Kickaha said. “They’re really delicious. Tender, too. Or you might prefer a testicle.”
“You really are disgusting,” Anana said. “You should see yourself, the blood dripping down your chin.”
But she took the proffered testicle and cut off a piece. She chewed on it without expression.
Kickaha smiled. “Not bad, eh? Starvation makes it taste good.”
They were silent for a while. Kickaha finished eating first. Belching, he rose with his knife in his hand. Anana gave him her axe, and he began the work of cutting off the horns of the antelope. These were slim straight weapons two feet high. After he had cut them off from the skull, he stuck them in his belt.
“When we find some branches, we’ll make spear shafts and fix these at their tips.”
Something gobbled in the darkness, causing all to get to their feet and look around. Presently the gobbling became louder. A giant figure loomed out of the dark red light. It was what Kickaha called a “moa,” and it did look like the extinct New Zealand bird. It was twelve feet high and had rudimentary wings, long thick legs with two clawed toes, and a great head with a beak like a scimitar.
Kickaha threw the antelope’s head and two of its legs as far as he could. The lesser gravity enabled him to hurl them much further than he could have on Earth. The huge bird had been loping along toward them. When the severed pieces flew through the air, it veered away from them. However, it stopped about forty feet away, looked at them with one eye, then trotted up to the offerings. After making sure that the humans were not moving toward it, it scooped up the legs between its beaks, and it ran off.
Kickaha picked up a foreleg and suggested that the others bring along a part, too. “We might need a midnight snack. I wouldn’t recommend eating the meat after that. In this heat meat is going to spoil fast.”
“Man, I wish we had some water,” McKay said. “I’m still thirsty, but I’d like to wash off this blood.”
“You can do that when we get to the lake,” Kickaha said. “Fortunately, the flies are bedding down for the night. But if morning comes before we get to the water, we’re going to be covered with clouds of insects.”
They pushed on. They thought they’d covered about ten miles from the hill. Another two hours should bring them to the lake, if they’d estimated its distance correctly. But three hours later, by Anana’s watch, they still saw no sign of water.
“It must be further than we thought,” Kickaha said. “Or we’ve not been going in a straight line.”
The plain had begun sinking in along their direction of travel. After the first hour, they were in a shallow depression four feet deep, almost a mile wide, and extending ahead and behind as far as they could see. By the end of the second hour, the edges of the depression were just above their heads. When they stopped to rest, they were at the bottom of a trough twelve feet high but now only half a mile
wide.
Its walls were steep though not so much they were unclimbable. Not yet, anyway.
What Kickaha found ominous was that all the animal life, and most of the vegetable life, had gotten out of the depression.
“I think we’d better get our tails up onto the plain,” he said. “I have a funny feeling about staying here.”
Urthona said, “That means walking just that much farther. I’m so tired I can hardly take another step.”
“Stay here then,” the redhead said. He stood up. “Come on, Anana.”
At that moment he felt wetness cover his feet. The others, exclaiming, scrambled up and stared around. Water, looking black in the light, was flowing over the bottom. In the short time after they’d become aware of it, it had risen to their ankles.
“Oh, oh!” Kickaha said. “There’s an opening to the lake now! Run like hell, everybody!”
The nearest bank was an eighth of a mile, six hundred and sixty feet away. Kickaha left the antelope leg behind him. The quiver and bow slung over his shoulder, the strap of the instrument case over the other, he ran for the bank. The others passed him, but Anana, once more, grabbed his hand to help him. By the time they had gotten halfway to safety, the stream was up to their knees. This slowed them down, but they slogged through. And then Kickaha, glancing to his left, saw a wall of water racing toward them, its blackish front twice as high as he.
Urthona was the first to reach the top of the bank. He got down on his knees and grabbed one of McKay’s hands and pulled him on up. Red Orc grabbed at the black’s ankle but missed. He slid back down the slope, then scrambled back up. McKay started to reach down to help, but Urthona spoke to him, and he withdrew his hand.
Nevertheless, Orc climbed over the edge by himself. The water was now up to the waists of Kickaha and Anana. They got to the bank, where she let go of his hand. He slipped and fell back but was up at once. By now he could feel the ground trembling under his feet, sonic forerunners of the vast oncoming mass of water.
He grabbed Anana’s legs, boosted her on up, and then began climbing after her. She grabbed his left wrist and pulled. His other hand clutched the grass on the lip of the bank, and he came on up. The other three were standing near her, watching them keenly. He cursed them because they’d not tried to help.
Orc shrugged. Urthona grinned. Suddenly, Urthona ran at Orc and pushed him. Orc screamed and fell sideways. McKay deftly pulled the beamer from Anana’s belt. At the same time, he pushed with the flat of his hand against her back. Shrieking, she, too, went into the stream.
Urthona whirled and said, “The Horn of Shambarimen! Give it to me!”
Kickaha was stunned at the sudden sequence of events. He had expected treachery, but not so soon.
“To hell with you!” he said. He had no time to look for Anana, though he could hear her nearby. She was yelling and, though he couldn’t see her, must be climbing up the bank. There wasn’t a sound from Red Orc.
He lifted the shoulder strap of the instrument case holding the horn and slipped it down his arm. Urthona grinned again, but he stopped when Kickaha held the case over the water.
“Get Anana up here! Quickly! Or I drop this!”
“Shoot him, McKay!” Urthona yelled.
“Hell, man, you didn’t tell me how to operate this thing!” McKay said.
“You utter imbecile!”
Urthona leaped to grab the weapon from the black man. Kickaha swung the instrument case with his left hand behind him and dropped it. He hoped that Anana would catch it. He dived toward McKay, who, though he didn’t know how to fire the beamer, was quick enough to use it as a club. Its barrel struck Kickaha on the top of his head, and his face smacked into the ground.
Half-stunned, he lay for a few seconds, trying to get his legs and arms to moving. Even in his condition, he felt the earth shaking under him. A roaring surged around him, though he did not know if that was the flood or the result of the blow.
It didn’t matter. Something hit his jaw as he began to get up. The next he knew, he was in the water.
The coldness brought him somewhat out of his daze. But he was lifted up, then down, totally immersed, fighting for breath, trying to swim. Something smashed into him—the bottom of the channel, he realized dimly—and then he was raised again. Tumbling over and over, not knowing which way was up or down, and incapable of doing anything about it if he had known, he was carried along. Once more he was brought hard against the bottom. This time he was rolled along. When he thought that he could no longer hold his breath—his head roared, his lungs ached for air, his mouth desperately wanted to open—he was shot upward.
For a moment his head cleared the surface, and he sucked in air. Then he was plunged downward and something struck his head.
CHAPTER SIX
Kickaha awoke on his back. The sky was beginning to take on horizontal bands of alternating dark-red and fiery-red. It was “dawn.”
He was lying in water which rose halfway up his body. He rolled over and got to all-fours. His head hurt abominably, and his ribs felt as if he’d gone twelve rounds in a boxing match. He stood up, weaving somewhat, and looked around. He was on shore, of course. The roaring wave had carried him up and over the end of the channel and then retreated, leaving him here with other bodies. There were a dozen or so animals that had not gotten out of the channel in time.
Nearby was a boulder, a round-shaped granite rock the size of a house. It reminded him of the one in the clearing in Anana’s world. In this world there were no rock strata such as on Earth. But here were any number of small stones and occasionally boulders, courtesy of the Lord of the lavalite planet, Urthona.
He remembered Anana’s speculation that some of these could conceal “gates.” With the proper verbal or tactile code, these might be opened to give entrance into Urthona’s castle somewhere on this world. Or to other pocket universes. Urthona, of course, would neither verify nor deny this speculation.
If he had the Horn of Shambarimen, he could sound the sequence of seven notes to determine if the rock did contain a gate. He didn’t have it. It was either lost in the flood or Anana had gotten up the bank with it. If the latter had happened, Urthona now had the Horn.
A mile beyond the boulder was a mountain. It was conical, the side nearest him lower than the other, revealing a hollow. It would not be a volcano, since these did not exist here. At the moment, it did not seem to be changing shape.
There were tall hills in the distance, all lining the channel. Most of the plain was gone, which meant that the mutations had taken place at an accelerating speed.
His bow and quiver were gone, torn from him while he was being scraped against the channel bottom. He still had his belt and hunting knife, however.
His shirt was missing. The undershirt was only a rag. His trousers had holes and rips, and his shoes had departed.
Woozily, he went to the edge of the water and searched for other bodies. He found none. That was good, since it gave him hope, however slight, that Anana had survived. It wasn’t likely, but if he could survive, she might.
Though he felt better, he was in no mood to whistle while he worked. He cut a leg off an antelope and skinned it. Hordes of large black green-headed flies settled on the carcass and him and began working. The bite of one fly was endurable, but a hundred at once made him feel as if he were being sandpapered all over. However, as long as he kept moving he wasn’t covered by them. Every time he moved an arm or turned his head or shifted his position, he was relieved of their attack. But they zoomed back at once and began crawling, buzzing, and biting.
Finally, he was able to walk off with the antelope leg over one shoulder. Half of the flies stayed behind to nibble on the carcass. The others decided after a while that the leg he carried was more edible and also not as active. Still, he had to bat at his face to keep them from crawling over his eyes or up his nose.
Kickaha vented some of his irritation by cursing the Lord of this world. When he’d made this world and decree
d its ecosystems, did he have to include flies?
It was a question that had occurred more than once to the people of Earth.
Despite feeling that he’d had enough water to last him a lifetime, he soon got thirsty. He knelt down on the channelbank and scooped up the liquid. It was fresh. According to Urthona, even the oceans here were drinkable. He ate some meat, wishing that he could get hold of fruit or vegetables to balance his diet.
The next day, some mobile plants came along. These were about six feet high. Their trunks bore spiral red-and-white-and-blue stripes, and some orange fruit dangled from their branches. Unlike the plants he’d encountered the day before, these had legs with knees. They lacked tentacles, but they might have another method of defense.
Fortunately, he was cautious about approaching them. Each plant had a large hole on each side, situated halfway down the length. He neared one that was separated from the others, and as he did so, it turned to present one of the holes. The thing had no eyes, but it must have had keen hearing. Or, for all he knew, it had a sonic transceiver, perhaps on the order of a bat’s.
Whatever its biological mechanisms, it turned as he circled it. He took a few more steps toward it, then stopped. Something dark appeared in the hole, something pulsed, then a black-red mass of flesh extruded. In the center was a hole, from which, in a few seconds, protruded a short pipe of cartilage or bony material.
It looked too much like a gun to him. He threw himself down on the ground, though it hurt his ribs and head when he did so. There was a popping sound, and something shot over his head. He rolled to one side, got up, and ran after the missile. It was a dart made of bone, feathered at one end, and sharp enough to pierce flesh at the other. Something green and sticky coated the point.
The plants were carnivorous, unless the compressed-air propelled dart was used only for self-defense. This didn’t seem likely.
Staying out of range, Kickaha moved around the plants. The one who’d shot at him was taking in air with loud gulping sounds. The others turned as he circled.