Laying in his two-person bunk with a
pillow over his head, Douglass could still hear the sounds of lovemaking
drifting through the frictionless air ducts. These air ducts were perfect
for carrying sound, and thanks to them nothing that went on in the capsule
was private. The woman who was moaning was his wife. The man
well, that was no secret. It was Cromwell, the weatherman.
Doug listened, feeling sick and hopeless
then another sound caught his attention. A distant
warbling cry, a chorus of voices. Then a woman's voice was sobbing over
the communications system. Her voice rang through the metal of the
capsule. "It was a skike, another damn skike," she was saying. "It killed
a boy." Doug rolled off his bunk and wriggled into his jungle gear,
stepped into his boots, and grabbed his rifle. He pushed through his door
and hurried out into the circular hall, heading for the front door.
Leo Calderon, the expedition leader, was
sealing off the capsule as Doug came trotting up. He looked at the dirty
jungle clothes and the gun in Doug's hand and said, "No, you're not going
out there." "Who else is out? Selene is
out there!" "Selene and Lipton are safe
in the village. There's no need for you going out."
"It killed a child."
"I don't care"
"Goddamn it, it killed a little kid!"
Doug shoved past the older man and pulled the quick release lever. The
doors slammed open and he leapt out into the dirt and leaves, the million
insects. "Douglass, come back here!"
Doug trotted down the path, flipping his
rifle on and glancing at its scanner.
"Douglass! That's an order!" Leo was
shouting. "You come back here now!" His voice grew distant, then faded out
altogether. Doug didn't notice, he just kept running. The village was
right ahead, he could see it through spiral leaves and odd horizontal
limbs. There was a wooden gate with an elaborate mechanical latch
every piece meticulously carved from wood
he let himself in and ran toward Lipton, who was holding a rifle but was
so pressed by the colonists that he could only point it straight up.
"Where's your wife?" Doug yelled.
"Over there by the body," Lipton yelled
back. "She saw it happen, the boy was protecting her."
Doug pushed his way through another
crowd and found Selene on the ground hugging her knees and crying. In
front of her was the gory mess that had been a colonist boy, about 11
standard years old. Doug recognized him, he remembered giving the child a
candy bar, and was then chewed out by Cromwell, Leo, and his own wife for
"introducing alien food into their diet" and "interfering" with their
studies. "The attack was here?" Doug
asked. "Inside?" Several of the
colonists nodded. One, who was called Jahk, pointed to planetary west and
said, "Th'skike it dug right through th'floor fence 'n right there."
"Show me."
He trotted with several men to the hole
where the skike had entered and then exited after the kill. The colonists
had covered the ground of their village with a tight crisscrossing of wood
everywhere inside the fence, and the skike had dug up underneath and broke
its way through. It was a big one, bigger than the one that usually
haunted this area. Doug set his rifle to scan the tunnel, and followed its
path to the edge of the fence and beyond. "It's a short tunnel," he told
Jahk. "It ends right out there."
"Th'other end we'll go 'n we'll wait
there," Jahk said. He was armed with a beautifully crafted crossbow with
deadly obsidiantipped arrows. Doug followed him and the other
colonists through a gate and out to the hole, where they stood with
weapons pointing. Doug was fiddling with
the knobs on his scanner. "It's not in there," he said. He took a few
steps to the edge of the jungle, scanning. "Out there," he said, his voice
hushed. "About thirty meters." "You c'n
see it?" Jahk asked him. "My machine
can. It's out there, not moving." "It
listens s'nd smells us," Jahk said. "Th'skike is safen 'n 'n 'n
th'jungle." "It thinks it's
safe." Rifle forward, Doug pushed his way into the foliage. "I'm going to
kill the thing. This time I am going to kill it." He ducked his
head under a branch, moving forward, the tart scent of sap burning his
nostrils. The colonists were right behind him, following close.
The beast heard them coming and
retreated. Doug watched it with the scanner, creeping forward, breathing
shallow. This was the skike's environment, the skike's territory. Even
with his energy weapon and his motion scanner Doug knew he was at a
disadvantage here. This beast weighed at least one standard ton, a
multilegged, twelveeyed creature with a large brain and quick
reflexes. The colonist's name for the creature was a perversion of the
English word "scythe" two of its forelegs were
scytheshaped blades a good 1.2 meters long, double edged and razor
sharp. Doug reached a clearing and
stopped. The colonists behind him stopped and spread out, weapons drawn
and ready. The beast was a mere 20 meters ahead, invisible in the foliage.
Doug braced himself against a frame tree to keep his aim steady, peering
through the screen at the curtain of leaves and branches in front of them.
The skike was there, just beyond. The bolt from the energy weapon could
burn right through to it, but if Doug didn't hit its brain it would be a
wasted shot. As he watched, it began to circle to the right, trying to get
behind them. He could hear it in the warm, heavy air; the rustling of
leaves, twigs snapping. The scanner showed it as a vague blob on the
screen, growing sharper. Doug realized
why it was circling. It wanted to cut them off from the village. "Back,"
he said between his teeth, "back off!" They moved back the way they'd
come, and all the while Doug was aware that the thing could leap through
the hanging foliage and slice him to pieces without him firing a shot. The
colonists, spooked, turned and ran.
Hearing them, the skike moved faster.
Doug was walking backwards, his gun
pointing toward the beast. If the damn thing would step into a clearing,
he thought, that would be the end. I'll murder it. Instead, the foliage
grew thicker. Doug could only see a few meters before broad spiral leaves
obscured his vision. Damn it, he thought, this is not good.
He sidestepped to the left, circling
around. The skike was 15 meters away now, passing him. It can leap this
far, he thought. And just as he was thinking that, he stepped on a dry
fallen limb and it snapped. Not too loud of a snap, but just enough. The
skike stopped, listening. Doug scrambled backwards, panicking. He stumbled
into a clearing and turned and ran. He could hear the skike moving behind
him. It was coming fast, he could hear the crashing and scraping as it
moved recklessly through the underbrush.
Doug turned and dropped, raising his
rifle. He could see it, it was light brown like the color of the tree
trunks, looking like a bundle of thick branches moving, raising and
lowering, and two shiny black blades raised on thick, strong arms, raised
to strike. Doug fired the rifle, blasting off one of the thing's legs. The
skike went rolling and scrambling around the clearing, slashing at the
air. In his panic Doug fired two more times, missing the creature
entirely, and when the creature stopped and Doug could get a bead on the
mass of black eyes, he pulled the trigger and the gun did nothing. A red
light came on, telling him to wait fifteen seconds for the capacitors to
recharge. The beast raised its blades
and came toward him. Doug let out a cry
and turned and ran. He heard crashing
behind him, the sound of the beast pursuing, but it fell behind. The wound
was slowing it down. There was a beep as the rifle was ready to fire
again, and Doug slid to a stop and turned around, rifle raised. The skike
was nowhere in sight. The scanner had it 40 meters away and fading as it
retreated into the deep jungle. Doug considered following it, but his
nerves were shot. He couldn't bring himself to do it.
Feeling bitter, he turned and made his
way back to the village.
#
It was only when Douglass arrived back at
the capsule did he realize how much trouble he was in. Leo Calderon,
biologist, anthropologist, was also the expedition commander. He was
general, king, judge and jury, and god as far as the expedition was
concerned. Douglass had disobeyed a direct order in leaving the capsule
after Leo had sealed it off. Doug's
wife, Janet, was standing beside Cromwell Flack as Leo ranted and raved
and stripped Doug of all rank and privilege. During the tirade Doug stood
silently and stared into his wife's eyes. She was a stranger, now. Janet
Nerro, with a PhD in Human Sciences, was willing to do anything to win a
place on this Technica expedition, even willing to convince a lowly
technician, a repairman, into thinking she was in love with him. Lowly as
he was, Technica considered Douglass the best qualified "engineer" for the
expedition and preferred that he be married to maintain the stability of
the team. Any woman scientist being considered for the expedition would
surely lock her place in on the team by marrying him. Cromwell Flack, the
eminent climate expert, was above all this he was allowed
to join the team without bringing a wife, which upset the balance. Seven
team members instead of eight, and four of them men. Out of all of them,
Douglass was the only one who was not a scientist. He was only along to
keep everything running for the duration.
Six more years, Douglass thought. Six.
". . . you are not to interact with the
colonists," Leo was raging at him, "you are not to speak with them, you
are not to look at them! Do you understand?"
"Yes sir."
"You are not to go into their village,
you are not to go into the jungle. Until further notice, you are confined
to the capsule. And you no longer have any access to Technica weapons!"
"Yes sir."
"Have I made myself clear?"
"Yes sir."
"Do you have any questions?"
"No sir." Actually, he had a lot of
them, but didn't have energy to bring them up.
"You're dismissed, Mr. Dunhill. Go to
your cabin." Doug nodded, but he was
still staring into his wife's eyes. She had no expression at all, she
simply stared back. He turned and walked stiffly out of the commons, out
into the circular hall. He passed the thin metal door to his cabin and
went instead to Cromwell's, letting himself in and closing the door behind
himself. He sat silently on the bed and waited.
Cromwell and Janet didn't show up right
away, so Doug took the opportunity to use Cromwell's data terminal.
Cromwell was going to be furious to find him in here, but Doug couldn't
imagine himself being in more trouble than he was already in. Using the
terminal's screen, he brought up a summery of the expedition.
TECHNICA MISSION #2786855 FAILURE OF COLONY
AT DROXFORD 2
Cromwell and Janet entered the cabin
as Doug was reading through the already familiar text. Cromwell merely
made a disgusted face at finding him in the room. "Douglass," he said,
"get out." "I want to read you
something." "Get out."
"Just listen to me. Please."
Cromwell sighed and crossed his arms.
Janet stood looking uncomfortable. She stared into his eyes, though.
Either she was totally without shame, or Doug had married a cyborg. He was
beginning to wonder. "The duration of
the mission is seven years," Doug said, reading from the data. "The object
of study: Native adaptation of the descendants of failed colony sent off
threehundredseven years before. Expedition goal: To determine
why the original colony failed, and find a solution to the problem.
Prepare a preliminary report for Technica recolonization effort." Doug
turned the terminal off. "We've been here for eleven months, right? So
what have we found?" "I'm not going to
waste my time discussing it with you."
"I'm not talking to you, I'm talking to
her. She's my wife, I have a right to talk to her, don't I?"
"This is childish, there is no point to
it," Cromwell said. Doug shrugged.
"Janet, please, talk to me."
"Obviously," Janet said, "we've only
been here eleven months, our findings are inconclusive."
"Inconclusive? We're to determine why
the original colony failed, and find a solution to the problem. Well, we
know why the colony failed! The skikes have been killing them off for over
threehundred years! And it's obvious how to solve the problem . . .
we move the colony to an area where there are no skikes."
"We are not going to move the
colonists. I'm not going over this with you again."
"The longer you wait, the more of them
are going to be killed!" "Doug, listen
to me. You're not a scientist. You think you know, but you don't
know all the facts. You're jumping to a conclusion! All evidence must be
considered. The colonists must be studied and their social structure
mapped out. Their customs and their evolutionary adaptations must be
analyzed. To do that, they must remain as they"
"They have to be killed off one by one
so you can determine exactly why they're dying?"
"This has gone far enough," Cromwell
said. "Out of here, now." "Cromwell,
stuff yourself." "Alright, I'm going to
go get Leo." Cromwell stormed out of the room.
"Doug," Janet said, "maybe you are
right. Maybe. But you go and move them, and we start fresh somewhere else
it may happen all over again with another tenthousand
colonists because we jumped the gun and we didn't find the truth."
"There is a perfectly habitable island
system a thousand klicks from here with no skike population whatsoever,"
Doug said. "They'd have all they need, and no"
Leo burst into the room. "Douglass!" he
yelled. "They'd have no need to fear!"
Douglass said to his wife. Leo and
Cromwell grabbed Doug by the arms and halfdragged halfcarried
him to his cabin, tossed him in, and locked the door from the outside.
#
For the next three and a half weeks
Douglass was incarcerated in his cabin. He was allowed to go from the
cabin to the bathroom, but that was it. When he was pulled out to fix
something, he was to fix it and then return to the cabin. Lipton and his
wife Selene would spend a few hours a day with him, and his wife would
occasionally visit. Janet would tell him the situation was unfortunate,
and assure him it would end soon as long as he continued to cooperate.
Lipton and his wife openly detested Doug's treatment and would daily make
protests to Leo for it to end. Leo remained stubborn because he wanted his
word to be law, and because he thought Doug should be taught a
lesson. One night in the middle of the
third week a large delegation of colonists carrying torches came from the
village. Doug watched from his view port, wondering what it was all about.
All the scientists were out to meet them, and after a few minutes Lipton
opened Doug's cabin door and stood smiling at him. "You're out, my
friend," he said. "You're free." "Oh,
what, Leo wants me to fix something? That's great. Tell Leo that he can
take whatever broken thing it is and stick it up his butt, because I'm on
strike." "No, the colonists have come for
you. They've made you part of their
tribe." "What?" "After
that day you went chasing that skike into the jungle, they decided you
were a member of their tribe. Selene and I kinda leaked the news that you
were being locked up out here, and they've come to get
you." Doug grabbed his jungle gear and
followed Lipton outside. The leader of the colonists, Kinjon, was
prominent among the delegation; two warrior women stood one to either side
of him holding flaming torches. He held out his arms and embraced Doug,
and called him brother. "Y'r th'bravest g'damn man of r'people," he said,
with some significance. "C'm on
w'us." Doug shrugged, and wordlessly
followed. The delegation returned to the
village, where two huge bon fires lit the area in orange, flickering
light. Naked men and women did a thrusting, gyrating dance to high,
warbling flute music. The scientists followed, everyone but Cromwell using
one instrument or another to record the event. To Doug, the whole thing
smacked of a fertility right. They sat in
a circle around the two bonfires and watched the dancers flirting with the
flames. It was nerve-racking for Doug to watch, he was sure someone's hair
was going to catch on fire or worse. The heat was making
him sweat. He felt like he was being
barbecued. Someone knelt down beside him.
It was Jahk, one of the warriors who'd followed him out after the skike.
"Y'r new w'us, I got'ta 'splain things
t'you." "Okay." "Th'girl
straight 'cross fr'm you is Shrew. She's c'm t'age, 'n this's her's. You
been chosen, you'n her first. Your s'posed t'go b'tween th'fires 'n
claim'n her."On the other side of the circle, obscured by the shimmering
of hot air, was a very young girl dressed in a loose gown of woven web
straw. It had an almost silver look to
it. "Jahk, run that by me again. I don't
think I understand." "Run past
you?" "What?" "Y'want
me t'run past you?" "No. I want you to
tell me what this is all about. I don't
understand." "Shrew's c'm t'age she's
s'posed t'get preggers. Th'people need y'r children 'cause y'r smart'n
brave." Selene must have seen the look of
panic in his eyes. She knelt down on the other side of him and said into
his ear, "This is their version of a 'coming out' party, Doug. You're not
marrying her." "She's so
young!" "This is their society. They're
in a race with death. They keep all their women pregnant, and their
children grow up faster." "Yeah, but
she's so young." "You d'n like
her?" Jahk asked. "Well, yes, I mean I
like her fine, but, it's just
that" "Go through
with it, Doug," Selene said. "There's nothing wrong about it. You'll be
honoring them and you'll be helping us. We'll need your experience for the
records, in fact your uploaded memories will become an important part of
our report." "Oh,
great." "This is science, Doug. I'll go
over and explain to Shrew that you're nervous about all this
maybe she'll make it easier on
you." "What are you going to tell
her?" "I'll tell her you're a virgin."
Selene stood and walked around the fires to the young native
girl. Jahk was incredulous. "Y'never
stuck it down?" The flute music was
growing wilder and more intricate, and the dancing females, most of whom
were pregnant, started coming up to Doug and shaking and gyrating in his
face. The men were treating the young girl across the way with the same
attentions. Then they pulled away and parted, making an erotic pathway
between the two of them. The fires were roaring like a
monster. Shrew stood up, her dress
shimmering. Jahk pulled Douglass to his feet and gave him a shove toward
her. As Doug was taking his first step, he saw something very large and
fast move behind Shrew, and the crowd began making panicked motions. It
was a skike. Doug saw it raising its bladelike forelegs up and
pausing, and, before he could react, it brought them down in sharp,
spasmodic motions. The flute music was replaced by screaming. He saw
Selene pushing Shrew away and then go down under one of the creature's
thrusts. He heard someone screaming his
name. Doug turned and saw his wife holding his rifle. She threw it at him
and he caught it. Doug walked between the
two fires, the rifle raised. People were in his way, colonist warriors
firing pointblank at the skike with their crossbows. The arrows would
either glance away or sink in only enough to anger the creature. "Move!"
Doug shouted. "Move out of the way!" They parted before him and he had a
clear shot. His rifle blazed. Several of the creature's legs and part of
its torso exploded, and it rolled over twice and scrambled off away from
the fires. He fired at it again, hitting it in the back. It let out a long
piercing shriek, but kept crawling. Doug walked along behind it, waiting
for the capacitors in his rifle to recharge. Several of the colonists,
including Jahk, followed respectfully behind
him. "It'n burrow! It'n burrow, right
there!" one called out. Doug looked ahead
to where the skike was heading. A dark hole in the earth. He walked to the
side of the creature, which was mostly dead, and aimed at the mass of
black eyes. The gun was recharged and ready to fire. He let loose with one
more shot and killed it. A motion caught
his eye. There was movement at the mouth of the hole. As he was turning a
tangled shadow of legs erupted from the hole, springing toward him. Doug
shot it dead center, blasting a large hole through its most vital area. It
reeled, balanced for a moment on hind legs; the skike towered above him,
then fell over on its back and lay there with quivering legs. "I
killed you!" Doug yelled at the thing. "Do you understand me? I
killed you! I killed you!" He kicked one of its more energetically
quivering legs. Beyond the two dead
beasts, one more emerged from the hole. It seemed to size up the
situation, studying its two dead companions, then backed down into the
earth. It kicked dirt after itself, blocking the
entrance. Doug walked up to the hole and
looked down. The dirt still moved as the creature below packed it tight.
He turned and looked at the colonists, who were staring at Doug with open
awe. Jesus, he thought. He stepped back
from the hole, and moved away from the dead skikes. He was breaking out in
a cold sweat, and he was shaking. The others! He'd seen Selene go down,
and Lipton and Cathy. Doug turned back toward the bon fires and the
panicked colonists and broke into a run.
#
The two men kneeled and prayed. They had
done all they could do for her, maybe saved her life. They didn't know for
sure; they wouldn't know for
years. Lipton was crying. His wife,
Selene, was now in hibernation until Technica came back to pick them up.
Leo and Cathy, the leader and his wife, were both dead. Cromwell and Janet
were in another part of the capsule hyper-waving the news to Technica. It
was just the four of them now. "Can't we
do anything else?" Lipton was mumbling. "Can't we do something
more?" Doug didn't know what to say to
the man. The only MD on the expedition was Selene. Doug certainly wasn't a
doctor. "We have to trust the automed," he told him. "This is the best
chance Selene has. We have her in stasis, her mind is still intact, her
body can be repaired once we're back in civilization. But for now, this is
the safest thing we can do." Lipton was
rocking back and forth, his arms crossed in
front of his chest. "I can't just leave
her frozen for six years," he said, his voice cracking. "I just
can't." "It won't be six years to her,"
Doug said. Lipton nodded wordlessly, and
continued rocking. He's in shock, Doug thought. He needs some sort of
antishock injection. Doug stayed with him for a while, then silently
got up to check with the automed about shock
medication. "I'm glad you killed the
goddamned thing," Lipton said. Doug
paused, looking back. "I'm glad I did too," he said
awkwardly. "The colonist chief, he said
they only killed one before." "They're
tough animals." "He said they came back
the next night and killed half his
people." "What?" "The
skikes came back, a whole bunch of them, and slaughtered half their
people." "Who told you
this?" "Kinjon, their
chief." Douglass felt faint. "The skikes
retaliate?" "I guess so. Maybe last night
they were retaliating because you'd hit one." He was staring at Doug with
a haunted expression. "But that was weeks
ago," Doug said. Lipton
shrugged. "You think that's
possible?" Lipton shrugged again. "The
colonists would know best." "You think
they'll come back?" "I don't
know." "You think they will, don't
you?" "The colonists think
so." "That means I . . . it means I
brought them, that I . . ." "You couldn't
have known, Doug. Nobody blames you. Kinjon would have killed it himself
last night if he'd been able to." Lipton's expression turned savage. "I'm
glad you killed it." "I killed two of
them,
Lipton." "Two?" "There
were three altogether, and I killed two. The third one got
away." "That one will probably bring
more." The two men stared at each other.
Doug was feeling more and more desperate. At that moment Cromwell entered
the room. "Technica sends us their
condolences," Cromwell said. "But they said that there was no way to speed
our departure. The next hyperspacial window is still years away. We're to
carry on as best we can." "What did they
say about Leo's death?" Lipton
asked. "They said what you'd expect
someone to say when they learn of a death. Since I'm the senior here,
however, I've assumed command." "They put
you in charge?" Doug said. "I've assumed
command." "But they didn't tell you that
you were in charge." "It was
implied." Doug didn't doubt it, but still
it galled him. "How are you with a blaster,
Cromwell?" "I don't touch the
things." "Well, that's just great.
There's a possibility that the skikes are coming back tonight, maybe more
that there were last night. What do you propose to do about
it." "Do about
it?" "Yeah, do about it. What do we do
about the skikes?" "We can't do anything
about the skikes. We're here to observe, not to take action. We do
nothing. We stay in the capsule until further
notice." Doug turned to Lipton. "I knew
he was going to say that. I just knew
it." Lipton nodded
unhappily. "You feel up to shooting some
skikes?" Doug asked him. Lipton took a
breath, staring at him. Then he stood up. "I'll kill as many as I
can." "You're not going to do anything of
the sort," Cromwell said. Doug swung on
him. "We damn well are," he said. "I'm tired of this donothing
nonsense." "You'll do what you're ordered
to do, Douglass! You're insubordination is the cause of this
situation!" "Don't give me that
crap." "I'm giving you an order,
technician! You're confined to your cubicle." Cromwell pointed in the
direction. Doug turned red, and took a
step toward Cromwell. Lipton stepped in front of him, and pushed him back.
To Cromwell, Lipton said, "You can't give him orders
anymore." "What? What did you
say?" "Doug's a member of the colonist
tribe," Lipton said. "He takes his orders from
Kinjon." "That's
ridiculous!" "No its not. You know what
that ceremony was about." Cromwell was
silent for a moment, shifting mental gears. "Well, if he's no longer part
of the expedition, he no longer has access to technica
equipment." "He does if Kinjon says he
does," Lipton said. "Kinjon is the utmost authority on this planet, and he
doesn't recognize Technica as a separate state." Lipton had a wild look in
his eyes, like he wasn't under control
anymore. "Lipton, don't be a
fool!" "That's the way it is, Cromwell."
Lipton took a threatening step toward the
man. "We'll see about that," Cromwell
said, backing up a step. "We'll see what Technica thinks about it." He
turned and quickly left the room. "A
meteorologist in charge of our expedition," Lipton said. "The thought
makes me ill." While Cromwell was busy in
communications, Doug and Lipton opened the weapons rack and armed
themselves to the teeth. They left the capsule and commandeered the
observation flyer, which was nothing more than a flat platform with a
railing. When the villagers saw them coming there was a big commotion, and
Doug had to shoo them out from under the craft so that they could
land. Kinjon came out to meet them, and
Lipton addressed the man. "We need two of your bravest so we can go out
and kill the skike before they can come
back." "I go w'you myself," he said.
"Jahk too." "We brought extra weapons, so
you can learn to use them." "Good." He
nodded, appearing very pleased. Doug and Lipton helped him up into the
flyer, then the warrior named Jahk. "Hold
on to the railing," Doug told them, and they nodded and held on. Doug sent
the craft drifting into the air, across the village and over the
jungle. Cromwell's voice came over the
com unit, but Doug switched it off.
#
They made a spiral path around the
village, extending outward, flying for hours with the scanners finding
nothing. Then, several miles out, they ran across a dozen of them in a
group. "This is perfect," Lipton said. "We'll wipe 'em all out at once and
be rid of them." "Yeah," Doug said,
speaking with more confidence than he felt. He let the flyer drift
silently down to treetop level, and set it to hover. They'd shown the
colonists how to handle the weapons, and the two picked up on it quite
fast. Point and shoot there really wasn't much to it, the
energy blasts fired perfectly straight. They each picked a target and
fired. The skikes screamed. Doug
discharged his rifle three times, killing two and wounding one, then
stopped to let it recharge. Most of them were dead, the rest wounded.
Doug's rifle recharged and he killed the last one he'd wounded, and then
there was another one. He killed it first shot the skikes
had no natural enemies that attacked from above, their brain cases were
easy targets. But, then there was another one. Doug was losing count. He
fired on it as well, wounding it, and then there were two more. Only then
did he realize there was more than the original twelve. More were coming
into the little clearing from the
east. He told the others to stop firing,
and turned his scanner to the east. He swore. "There's hundreds of
them!" Lipton looked over the scanner
reading. "Looks like more than that. The scanner must be
malfunctioning." "No, it's not." Doug
raised above the treetops and sent the flyer east. There was a large
clearing ahead, and it was all brown. It looked like acres and acres of
fallen logs, but the logs were
moving. Now it was Lipton's turn to
swear. "Thousands of them," he said under his
breath. "Tens of thousands," Doug said.
He was watching the scanner. "They're all heading that
way." "All of
them?" "All of them. They're heading
toward the village." The men stared at
each other, and then Doug said, "Lipton, how many women and children do
you think the orbital can transport at a time? In the passenger
compartment and also in the cargo
bay?" "A lot of children could fit. A lot
of the smaller women, too." "It's about a
hourandahalf round trip to the Calos Islands, plus say a
half an hour to load and unload. Call it two hours
even." "It's possible, then. We should at
least start. Women and children first, and some men to take care of them,
in case . . ." Kinjon was following their
thoughts, and he nodded. "You go first," he said. "I want you and Jahk
with them." "Jahk can go, but I have too
much only I can do." "What are you
thinking about?" Lipton asked. "The
defense system. On the
capsule." "What?" "I'm
going to move it to the village." "Can
that be done?" Doug nodded, and turned
the craft around. At the village, Kinjon
and the warrior Jahk leapt to the ground to immediately ready their people
for the ordeal. Doug then flew the craft over to the capsule, and told
Lipton to prepare the orbital for its mission as a sky
ferry. "Doug Dunhill!" called out
Cromwell's voice. "By the authority given to me by Technica, I am placing
you under arrest." He came walking up to the flier as Doug was shutting it
down. "That's fine, but you're going to
have to wait a few days." "I'm not
waiting a second." Doug looked up at the
man, and realized Cromwell was aiming a pistol at him. Janet was standing
behind and to the side of Cromwell, looking cool and unemotional. She said
nothing. "There are thousands of those
skikes heading right for this place," Doug
said. "Right," Cromwell
said. "I'm telling you the truth. If you
don't believe me, ask Lipton." Cromwell
smirked. "Why should I believe
him?" "What, is he under arrest too? Are
you and Janet carrying out the rest of this mission by
yourselves?" Just then the orbital rose
into the air beside the capsule, startling both Cromwell and Janet.
"What's going on?" Cromwell exclaimed. "What's he
doing?" "We're evacuating as many
colonists as we can before the skikes get here. And I'm taking down the
defense system and setting it up on the tower in the middle of the
village." "You're doing no such
thing!" "You'll have to kill me to stop
me." Janet stepped forward. "Doug, you
can't be serious. You can't take down our only means of
defense." "Well, what about them?" He
motioned toward the village. "What are we going to do, jam all 400 of them
into the capsule? It's a bit small, don't you
think?" "But..." "The
only other answer is to move the capsule into the village, and it's a
little heavy for that. It was meant for one trip, down, and not back
up." "You're not taking the defense
system," Cromwell said. "And I'll kill you if I have
to." "Okay, kill
me." Cromwell grinned, and raised the
pistol to eye level. "I will, I warn you. Now go to your cabin like a good
little tech." "I'm not going
anywhere." "I'm giving you one last
chance." "Cromwell," Janet said,
"Cromwell, think about this." "I'm in
charge here." "Cromwell, Doug has a good
point." "He does not! What are you
talking about?" "We can't let the subject
of our study die off right before our
eyes." "You believe
him?" "Yes, I do. Doug has never lied to
me." "He's not lying to you, he's lying
to me!" "Cromwell, I'm not going to let
you shoot my husband." "Your
husband? Now he's your husband
again?" "He's never stopped being my
husband." Both men gave her
looks. "Well," she
said. "Look, Cromwell, are you going to
kill me or what? I mean, I'm in a hurry, I'm sure you
understand." "You're not taking the
defense system." "Do we have to go
through this again?" "You're not taking
it." "Okay, shoot me in the back, then."
Doug walked off toward the
capsule. Cromwell raised the
gun. "Cromwell!" Janet said. She forced
his arm down with her's. As the two began a shouting match, Doug made his
way up to the capsule's pointed roof with his tools. He disassembled and
removed the automatic energy weapons, placing each piece carefully in a
sack hanging from his shoulder. The two were still shouting at each other
as he finished with the weapons and started on the computer
system. The orbital glided back from the
village and hovered over Doug. Lipton popped the hatch and poked his head
out. "Got a load, all the kids and some women. Jahk refused to go, though
he wants to stay and
fight." Doug nodded. "Didn't really
expect him to go, did you?" "Not really."
He waved. Doug waved
back. Cromwell took a moment out from his
heated argument to yell at Lipton. "You bring that thing down here at
once!" He fired a round at the orbital, the slug bouncing off the heat
shield with a dull thunk. Lipton hurriedly closed the hatch and send the
craft into the sky, heading toward the
coast. Cromwell turned the gun on Doug
and fired. Doug lunged back and away from Cromwell, putting the
coneshaped top between them. There was a loud thud and the sound of
someone hitting the ground, and he thought, Goddamn, he killed Janet! He
peeked over the cone and saw Janet standing over Cromwell, who was face
down on the ground. Janet was holding a large
rock. "Do what you have to do," she
called up to him. "I'll make sure I haven't killed
him." "Why don't you just hit him a few
more times," Doug said. "That would be
murder." Doug shrugged, and resumed his
task. By the time he had dismantled the
entire defense system and transferred it and a spare energy supply over to
the village, Lipton was back with the orbiter for another load. "The
skikes are close," he told Doug. "They'll be here before I'm back again.
How's it going here?" "I'm having
problems. I can't mount the guns as solidly as they should be, so the
targeting is going to have to continually recalibrate
itself." "What does that
mean?" "It's going to be slow and
inaccurate." "Well, it'll be better than
nothing." Doug
shrugged. Somebody called out a warning.
Doug and Lipton swung around, saw a skike just outside the village fence.
It was quietly walking along the perimeter. Colonists were running toward
it with their crossbows, and Lipton was going for a rifle. Doug muttered,
and hurriedly tried to finish what he was doing. The next time he looked
up the skike had retreated off into the jungle with several arrow shafts
sticking out of its legs. Testing us, he thought. Seeing if we'll strike
it with lightening. There was more
yelling from another side of the village. Several more skikes were
strolling along the outside of the fence to the west. Lipton went running
across the village but Doug waved him down. "Don't worry about
it!" "What?" Lipton
said. "Get the rest of this load in the
orbiter and don't worry about it." Lipton
nodded, and ran off. Doug hurriedly
finished up his connections and then climbed down the tower. Next he had
to hook up the power supplies and get the computers going. A few of the
colonists yelled as one of the skikes, angry about being pelted with
arrows, began digging under the fence. "Lipton!" Doug
yelled. "What?" Lipton was helping
several pregnant women into the orbiter's
hatch. "There's one over there
have to worry about." Lipton
wordlessly picked up his rifle and ran. A few minutes later heavy booms
rolled across the village. There were screams. Doug looked around and saw
that there were several more around the fence, on all sides. Many of them
were digging. Doug looked at his rifle which was on the ground a few feet
away, but he decided against it. He couldn't shoot all of them. He had to
finish what he was doing here and
now. Jahk, the warrior, blasted away at
one of the beasts with the rifle Doug had given him. Kinjon was on the
other side of the village, blasting away. They were blowing holes in their
village fence as they aimed for the skikes beyond. Doug forced himself to
look down, to concentrate on his work. It was impossible, he kept on
looking up. One skike broke ground inside
the fence about 40 meters away from Doug, and it was immediately
surrounded by colonists. It sliced several of them to pieces as Doug
watched. He couldn't stand it anymore, he grabbed his rifle and ran out to
it. It followed several of the colonists as they ran, and then turned and
seemed to study Doug as Doug aimed the rifle. Then it jumped, and Doug
blasted as it hurled at him in midair. He had to jump to one side to
avoid it landing on him. He shot it again to make sure it was dead, then
ran back to the tower and the computer system
underneath. Five more connections and it
was done. Now it needed to be recalibrated. The skikes were attacking too
soon! There wasn't time. Doug turned it on, and set it to recalibrate on
anything that moved. At the last moment he realized it would be firing on
the colonists as well. From the top of
the tower came a rapid staccato of stunning blasts, and dirt and fire
sprayed out from the impact points, killing at least two warriors and
wounding a skike. Doug shut it down and shouted, "Run toward me! Run for
the center of the village! Run, now! Now! Move it! Mooove your f***ing
asses!" More skikes were breaking
through the ground. Some of the colonists understood and ran, some didn't.
Doug couldn't risk leaving it off any longer, the skikes would overrun the
village. He turned it back on and watched, grimacing. The weapons system
blazed and thundered, rapid fire, and he saw Lipton leap for cover. There
was a burst near him, but it didn't hit. Thank god it wasn't calibrated,
Doug thought. He began working with it, pointing out to the computer the
differences between skikes and men, and with more and more accuracy it
began shooting at only the skikes, and hitting them
too. It took a while, but Lipton managed
to crawl back to the orbiter. He tried to shout something to Doug, but
Doug couldn't hear it above the blasts. Over the next few minutes the
firing slowed as it ran short of
targets. "The orbiter!" Lipton was
shouting. "Will it fire on the
orbiter?" Doug shook his head. He'd
already locked that out of the
computer. Lipton stuffed as many more
women that would fit, ran out of women, then stuffed in a few of the
younger men. The orbiter was jammed. It was never meant to hold that many
people. Lipton waved at Doug and closed the hatch. The defense system
paused for a moment as the orbiter lifted into the sky, then resumed with
new energy as a hoard of the beasts charged out of the jungle and, piling
one on top of the other, crushed the fence. The computer control was more
accurate than Doug expected, it killed the skikes as fast as they could
show themselves. For ten minutes the skikes poured in and died, then
another charge came from another direction, and those skikes poured in and
died. Fortyfive minutes later they pulled back, retreating, and for
the first time in almost two hours the defense system fell
silent. Doug checked the power supplies.
They were taking up most of the flyer's deck space the
flier was floating alongside the tower and moored to it like a boat at a
dock. The supplies were drained all the way down to 23%, but were
recharging. Thank god they retreated, Doug thought. Another half an hour
and the guns would have stopped firing for the lack of
power. The sun slowly sank out of sight,
and Doug took two of the flier's emergency flair globes and released them
into the sky. It was enough to cast everything in a pale glow for most of
the night. Next, he hooked the flier's power supply in line with the
others to help speed up the recharge. He really didn't have any other
choice. The defense system fired. Doug
jumped, startled, and looked in the direction it had fired. At first he
didn't see anything, but then he realized he was looking too far away. Ten
meters in front of him there was a hole in the ground. The defense system
had caught a skike coming up from a burrow. This far in? he thought. They
can dig right up to the base of the tower!? Goddamn
it! Jahk was not far away. He was looking
at the hole too. "They're digging up underneath us," Doug said to him.
"Get everyone up on the roofs of your huts, and get as many up into the
tower as you can." Jahk nodded and started yelling
orders. Lipton returned in the orbiter
and picked up another load. He was fitting more in than he or Doug thought
they would, but the flight was taking longer. "That island is beautiful,"
Lipton said. "It's a wonder why they didn't settle there in the first
place." "They wanted room to grow, and no
one knew about the skikes." "Well, you
were right about the island." It wasn't
much of a comfort. Doug had known all along he was right
he'd been there. Now it was a question of whether or not he would live to
see it again. Lipton finished loading up
the orbiter and was off. Doug watched the luminous trail as it shot across
the night sky, wishing he was on it this time. Then he thought about Janet
and Cromwell in the capsule, and realized they were over there without a
defense system. He climbed into the flier and turned on the communications
unit, and called out his wife's
name. "Doug! Thank god!" she said
immediately. "How're you holding up over
there?" "The jungle is one big mass of
skikes!" she said. "They're so thick around the capsule you can't see the
ground. Doug, how are you going to get us out of
here?" That's a good question, he
thought. "Is there any danger of them getting inside? They shouldn't be
able to get through that metal alloy with anything less than a laser
torch." "We're safe so far," she said.
"Just scared and feeling trapped." "How's
Cromwell's head?" "He's got a mild
concussion, Douglass, but you didn't answer my
question." "I'm busy keeping skikes out
of the village grounds, Janet. You're just going to have to sit tight,
you're safer than anyone right now." The defense system fired practically
at the tower's foundation, the beam so close to the flier that it gave
Doug radiation burns. A skike writhed in death spasms in a hole almost
straight down. "Gotta go," he told his wife, and turned off the
communicator. "Jahk!" he yelled. "They're going to be coming up right
under us! They'll be coming up inside the huts!" And on the other side of
huts, too, he thought. The defense system won't be able to shoot at
something it doesn't see. The defense
system fired once, twice, again almost at the base of the tower. Some of
the colonists were yelling; a skike had come up between two of the huts.
As it wandered out and in sight of the defense system it was
killed. Doug eyed the huts. Jahk was
jumping from one roof to another, yelling. There was muted screams from
inside some of them. As Doug watched, the hut that Jahk was standing on
collapsed and fell. A skike grabbed his frantic body and pulled him
underground before the defense system could
strike. "Jahk!" Doug yelled, but his
voice was drowned out by the blasts. He'd raised his rifle, but there was
nothing to shoot at. There was nothing he could do but
fidget. The tower wavered. He looked
down, seeing nothing . . . but Doug knew. This was it. The
skikes were under the foundation. He looked up to see a few more of the
huts fall. Yes, the skikes were learning all right. They were learning how
to win. There was a jolt that nearly
threw Doug down to the ground. Even over the blasts he could hear the
sharp cracking of timbers. Doug leapt into the flier and began ripping
connections loose, yelling for the men who were up there with him to climb
in. Only two made it, then the foundation sank, undermined, and the tower
was falling. The top of it hit the flier on it's way down, sending it
spinning out of control across the village. Doug and the two other men
hung on. Doug's rifle flew right off of his shoulder and down to the
ground, lost. The gyros kicked in and
stopped the spinning, leaving him dazed. The defense system was dead, but
there were still blasts. A few men were still left with rifles, leaping
from hut to hut and firing away. Gotta get them on board, he thought, and
staggered to the controls of the flier. Flashing lights indicated damage.
Just keeping the flier in the air was draining the power supply at an
alarming rate. Hell, Doug thought. Hell and
damn. He nudged the flier toward the
closest huts, collecting several men, then over to the common building
where there were several more. "Hang from the sides," Doug told them after
no more could fit in the flier. "Just hang on." There was an electric
whining sound from somewhere in the flier, and he could smell hot metal.
The thing was not meant to hold this much weight. Hell with it, he
thought. Better to die of a fall than to be chopped up by those beasts. He
looked down to see the village grounds were black and swarming with them,
indistinct and nightmarish in the pale light of the dying flair globes.
Maybe, he thought, if we fall on one we'll take it with
us. There was a buzzing and a large red
light flashed on the control panel. The flier was now on emergency
auxiliary power and was demanding that he land immediately. Yeah, right,
Doug thought. Land where? Instead, he sent the craft up into the sky, a
platform jammed with men, men hanging over the sides, men hanging from
men. Doug could hardly move. They got up above the level of the flair
globes and drifted out over the jungle, which was black and crawling with
shapes. The whole skike population of the continent must be here now, he
thought. One good fusion blast and maybe the mainland could be
colonized. The thought was almost funny. If there was a fusion
self-destruct on the flier he would have used it. Instead, the best he
could hope for is to smash a couple of them when the flier
dropped. One of the men hanging onto the
side lost his grip and fell. He dropped silently, lost into the murk of
the night. Doug continued, uninterrupted. This is it, he was thinking.
This is how it happens. Death by falling, sudden and quiet. I won't yell
when it happens, I won't close my eyes. I'll go face down staring at the
ground. Another red light on the panel
was flashing erratically, trying to get his attention. He glanced down and
saw it was a proximity alert. Proximity? he thought, confused. He was
certain it was a malfunction. He looked around doubtfully for something
close to them and saw the orbiter approaching, door open. Lipton was
yelling, "Be careful! Climb in one at a time!" He moved the door right up
to the edge of the flier and the men began climbing in, turning and
helping others in. Doug watched with a stunned calmness. He had been
prepared to die. He was still prepared to die. Finally it was just
down to himself and another man, and that man was Kinjon. Kinjon gripped
Doug's arm with a strong hand and pulled. They weren't in the orbiter
longer than a minute when the flier dropped. It just disappeared silently
and was gone. Doug looked after it with a
sense of wonder.
#
It was a bright, windy day when they
returned to the mainland. They avoided the village, not really wanting to
see it, and circled around from behind, coming down carefully through the
trees. There was not a skike in
sight. Janet and Cromwell were outside
the capsule, waiting nervously. They scrambled aboard as soon as the hatch
opened. "Come on!" Cromwell was saying. "Get this damn thing in the air.
Let's get moving!" Lipton stared at him
with hatred but remained silent. Doug
disabled the controls with a password and said, "We came here for
something besides you." "What?" Janet
said. "For Selene? She's still in stasis, nothing's going to bother
her." "Yeah." Doug and Lipton climbed
down out of the orbiter without an explanation, and walked over to the
capsule. Doug unlocked the door and they
entered. The automed unit was warm,
quiet. Inside part of it was Selene, laying in a dreamless, timeless
solitude. Both men stood in front of it for a few minutes, then Lipton
began taking off his clothes. The automed
held room for one more. They didn't say
anything to each other. They just shook hands. Lipton climbed in and it
cycled shut, and Doug waited around to make sure he went into stasis
without any problems. I'll see you again, Doug thought. When Technica
comes back, I'll say goodbye. Not now. He
left the capsule, locking the door behind him. Lipton wanted to be with
his wife. He wouldn't have survived the next six years without her,
knowing she was all alone in this jungle, a thousand kilometers away. Doug
had approved. If he'd had Selene for a wife, he would have done the
same. Doug's wife was in the orbiter,
waiting. He climbed in and shut the door, and stood staring at her where
she sat, far away from Cromwell. He didn't say anything. He hadn't made
his mind up about her, yet. It was
Cromwell he spoke to. "I am now in charge," he
said. "That's what
you" "Shut up!" Doug
yelled. Cromwell blustered. "If you
think" "Shut
up!" "I
am" "Shut up!" Doug
approached him menacingly. "From now on you do exactly what I say, and
right now I want you to keep your goddamned mouth
shut." Cromwell swallowed and looked down
at his scuffed shoes. He remained silent. He didn't look
up. Doug returned to the front, unlocked
the controls, and sent the orbiter off toward the sea.
Submission
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