“Don’t bet on whether anyone knows we’re here. We didn’t pick where we landed — something else did. Mebbe we’re about to find out who.” Nenda pointed to the straggling rocks, curving away in a half circle beyond the ship. “Here comes Kallik — an’ in a hurry.”
Rebka stared at the dark, distant blur with a good deal of curiosity. He had never seen a Hymenopt at full stretch. The rotund, barrel-shaped body with its short, soft fur and eight sprawling legs looked too pudgy and clumsy for speed. But Kallik’s nervous system had a reaction speed ten times as fast as any human’s. The wiry limbs could carry her a hundred meters in less than two seconds.
They were doing it now, each leg moving too fast to be visible. All that Rebka could see was the central speeding blur of the black body. Kallik skidded to a halt at their side in less than ten seconds. Her coat was covered with wet brown mud.
“Trouble?” Nenda asked.
“I think so.” The Hymenopt was not even out of breath. “There are structures along the shoreline about three kilometers away, hidden by the rocks. I approached them and went briefly inside two of them. It was too dark to see much within, but it is clear that they are artificial. However, there was no sign of the inhabitants.”
“Could they be Zardalu dwellings?”
“I believe they are.” Kallik hesitated, while Rebka reflected on the little Hymenopt’s courage. Thousands of years had passed since her species had been slaves of the Zardalu, but the images of the land-cephalopods were still strong in Kallik’s race memory. On her last encounter with the Zardalu they had torn one of her limbs off, casually, to make a point to humans. Yet she had entered those unknown structures alone, knowing there might be Zardalu inside.
“For several reasons,” Kallik continued, “not least of which is my conviction that this planet is indeed Genizee. Look at this.”
Before Rebka or Nenda could object she was off again, racing down to the water’s edge and continuing into it. The beach fell away steeply, and within a few feet Kallik vanished beneath the surface. When she reappeared she was holding a wriggling object in her two front claws and blurring back toward them.
Hans Rebka could not see her prize clearly until she was again at his side. When she held it out to him he took a step backward. Irrational fear and alarm began to eat at the base of his brain. He stopped breathing.
The two-foot-long creature that Kallik grasped so casually was a millennia-old nightmare in miniature. Multiply its size by ten times, and the tentacled cephalopod became a Zardalu, seven deadly meters of midnight-blue muscle and intelligent ferocity.
“A precursor form, surely,” Kallik was saying. “Already this is amphibious, able to function on both land and water. Observe.” She placed the creature on the ground. It rose onto splayed tentacles and blinked around it with big lidded eyes.
“Allow evolution to proceed,” Kallik went on, “and from this form a land-cephalopod would be quite a natural result. With emergence onto land, a substantial increase in size and intelligence would also not be surprising.” The creature at her feet made a sudden snatch at her with its cruel hooked beak. She swatted it casually before it made contact. It flew ten meters to land on the soft moss, and scuttled off for the safety of the water. Its speed on land was surprising.
“Another reason I’m glad we didn’t land in the water a mile further on,” Nenda said cheerfully. “How’d you like a dozen of them chewing your butt when you’re tryin’ to swim?”
But he was not as cheerful and relaxed as he tried to appear. Rebka had not been the only one to step away instinctively when that Zardalu-in-miniature had been dropped at their feet.
“We need to go to those buildings,” Rebka said. “And if—”
Before he could complete his thought, there was a clattering sound from inside the seedship. J’merlia stood at the edge of the hatch. His compound eyes swiveled from the soaking-wet Kallik to Hans Rebka.
“With respect, Captain Rebka, but Atvar H’sial has bad news.”
“The ship is past repairing?”
“Not at all. The drive is intact. With a few hours work the hull can be sealed adequately and the ship readied for space takeoff. I am prepared to begin that work at once. The bad news is that this is the only surviving drone, and even it will need repair before it can be used.” He lifted a small and buckled cylinder, covered with black mud. “The rest were crushed on impact. If we wish to send a warning message back to the Erebus, this single unit is our only hope. And it cannot be launched until the seedship itself is again in space.”
Rebka nodded. As soon as he had seen the little drone, the question of a message to Darya and the others had come again to his mind. But what message? The more he thought about their situation, the more difficult it became to know what should be said. What did they know?
“J’merlia, ask Atvar H’sial to come outside. We need to brainstorm for a few minutes.”
“She is already on the way.”
The Cecropian was squeezing through the hatch, to drop lightly onto the soft moss. The great white head with its sonic generator and yellow receiving horns scanned the shoreline and the inland tangle of rocks and vegetation. She stretched to her full height, and the six-foot-long cephalic antennas unfurled.
“You sure, At?” Nenda asked. He was picking up her pheromonal message before J’merlia could translate for the others.
The blind head nodded.
“Zardalu,” J’merlia said.
“She can smell ’em,” added Nenda. “Long way off, and faint, but they’re here. That settles that.”
“Part of it,” Rebka said. He waited until Atvar H’sial had turned back to face him and J’merlia had moved for easy communication into the shelter of the Cecropian’s carapace. “Even if we could send the drone this minute, I’ve still got real problems about what we ought to say.”
“Like what problems?” Nenda had picked up a shred of moss and was nibbling it thoughtfully.
“Like, we know we’re not in charge here. Somebody else brought us down. But who’s doing what? What should we tell Darya and the others? My first thoughts for a message were probably the same as yours: We got through the singularities all right, this planet is Genizee, and there are live Zardalu here though we haven’t seen them yet. We can’t get back, because somebody forced our ship to make a crash landing on Genizee and we have to fix it.
“So who forced us down? We were shaken up a bit when we hit, but we’re in fair shape and so is our ship. Now, you know the Zardalu. If they were in charge, they’d have blasted us right out of the sky — no way we’d have survived a landing if they were running the show.
“But let’s be ridiculous and suppose they did want us to land in one piece, because they had other plans for us.”
“Like eating us.” Nenda spat out the bit of moss that he was chewing and made a face. “They’d like us better than this stuff. I’ve not forgotten their ideas from last time. They like their meat super-fresh.”
“Whatever they want to do with us, it would only make sense for them to bring us to a landing place where they are. So where are they?”
“Maybe they’re worried about our weapons,” Nenda offered. “Maybe they want to have a look at us from a distance. They wouldn’t think we were dumb enough to fly here in a ship that didn’t have weapons.”
“Then why not land us hard enough to make sure that all our weapons were put out of action?” Rebka ignored Nenda’s crack about coming weaponless, but he stored it up for future reprisal. “It doesn’t make sense, soft-landing us and then leaving us alone.”
“With respect,” J’merlia said softly. “Atvar H’sial would like to suggest that the source of your perplexity is in one of your implicit assumptions. She agrees that we were surely landed here by design, although her own senses did not allow her to detect the presence of the beam that tore the seedship from its trajectory and deposited it at its present location. But according to what you have told her, the beam came from the moon —
that hollow, artificial moon of which you spoke — not from Genizee itself. What does that suggest? Simply this: the unwarranted assumption that you are making is that the Zardalu who are here also brought us here.”
J’merlia paused. There was a long silence, broken only by the ominous sigh of strong wind across gray moss. It was close to sunset, and with the slow approach of twilight the weather was no longer the flat calm that had greeted their arrival.
“That don’t help us at all,” Louis Nenda said at last. “If the Zardalu didn’t grab our ship and bring us here, then who the blazes did?”
“Atvar H’sial does not know,” J’merlia translated. “However, she suggests that what you are asking is a quite different — though admittedly highly significant — question.”
* * *
The seedship’s computational powers had not been affected by impact with the surface of Genizee. From the planet’s size, mass, orbital parameters, and visible features, the computer readily provided an overview of surface conditions.
Genizee rotated slowly, with a forty-two-hour day, about an axis almost normal to its orbital plane. The atmospheric circulation was correspondingly gentle, with little change of seasons and few high winds. The artificial moon, circling just a couple of hundred thousand kilometers away, looked huge from Genizee’s surface, but its mass was so tiny that the planet’s tides came only from the effects of its sun; again, the slow rotation rate decreased their force.
The climate of mid-latitude Genizee was equable, with no extremes of freezing or baking temperatures. Surface gravity was small, at half standard human. As a result the geological formations were sharp and angled, sustaining steeper rock structures than would be possible in a stronger field; but the overall effect of those delicate spires and arches was more aesthetic than threatening, as abundant vegetation softened their profiles. The final computer summary suggested a delicate and peaceful world, a cozy environment where native animals needed little effort to survive. There should be nothing to fear from the easygoing native fauna.
“Which proves just how dumb a computer can be,” Louis Nenda said. “If Zardalu are easygoing and laid back, I’ll — I’ll invest everything I have in Ditron securities.”
He and Atvar H’sial had lagged behind Rebka and Kallik as they walked along the shore. With three hours to go to planetary nightfall, Hans Rebka had decreed that before they could rest easy they needed to take a close look at the structures that Kallik had found. He was particularly keen to have Atvar H’sial’s reaction. Given her different suite of sensory apparatus, she might perceive something where others did not.
J’merlia had been left behind in the seedship. He had already begun work on the repair of the hull and the message drone, and he had insisted that the work would go fastest with least interference. If they stayed away for three hours or more, he said, he would have the ship ready for takeoff to orbit.
“Investment in securities of any kind begins to appear as an attractive alternative to our own recent efforts for the acquisition of wealth.” The pheromonal message diffused across from Atvar H’sial, who was crouching low to the ground and reducing her speed to a crawl to match Nenda’s pace. “It is never easy to be objective about one’s own actions and one’s accomplishments, but it occurs to me that our recent history has not been one of uninterrupted triumph.”
“What you mean?”
“You and I chose to remain on Serenity to acquire an unprecedented and priceless treasure of Builder technology. When we were returned to the spiral arm by the Builders’ constructs — for whatever reason — our new objective became the planetoid of Glister, for the purpose of the acquisition of Builder technology there, and the repossession of your ship, the Have-It-All. To that end, we agreed that we would need the use of some other ship, and we set out for Miranda with that in mind. But see where our fine strategy has taken us. We find ourselves deep in the middle of one of the spiral arm’s least understood and most dangerous regions, on a world we believe to be native to the arm’s most ferocious species, with a ship that is presently incapable of taking us to orbit. One wonders if our record is much superior to a suggested Ditron investment.”
“You’re too negative, At. Did you ever see a big snake like a python swallow a big fat pig?”
“That event, I am happy to say, has not been part of my life experience.”
“Well, the thing about it is this: once it starts, it can’t stop. Its teeth curve backward, so it has to open its mouth wider an’ wider an’ swallow an’ swallow an’ swallow until it downs the whole thing. See, it can’t give up in the middle.”
“How very unedifying. But a question appears to be in order. Do you see us in the role of the python, or of the pig?”
“At, none of that. Stop puttin’ me on.”
Atvar H’sial’s pheromones were in fact filled with sly self-satisfaction as they walked the last quarter mile to the structures along the shoreline. It took a lot to shake a Cecropian’s invincible self-satisfaction and conviction of superiority.
There were five buildings, each made of a fine-grained material like cemented gray sand. The shore of the blue-gray sea jutted out at that point into a long, spoon-shaped peninsula, four hundred yards long, with the beach falling away steeply on each side of it. The buildings, each sixty feet tall, sat together in a cluster within the bowl of the spoon, with water lapping up to within thirty yards of their walls. Although the tides of Genizee were small and the winds usually mild, it was easy to imagine that the water sometimes came up to and even inside all of the buildings.
Kallik and Hans Rebka had walked out along the long handle of the spoon and already made a circuit of each building by the time Nenda and Atvar H’sial reached them.
“Not a window in sight.” Rebka advanced to an elliptical doorway, three times as tall as he was and at least six feet across. “Atvar H’sial, you’ll see a lot more than the rest of us in there, even with the lights we’ve got. Lead the way, would you, and pass word through Nenda about what you’re seeing.”
When Nenda had translated, the Cecropian nodded and shuffled forward into the first of the buildings. The pleated resonator below her chin was vibrating, while the yellow horns on each side of her head were turned to the dark interior. Louis Nenda followed right behind her, then Kallik. Rebka stayed at the entrance. He was their watchdog, dividing his attention between the activity inside and the deserted shore. As the light faded, the interior of the building became increasingly hard to see. Squinting west, Rebka estimated that sunset was less than an hour away.
“Three steps up, then four down. Watch how you go,” Nenda translated. “At’s standing where the inside divides into two, into a couple of big rooms that split the whole interior in half. One’s nearly empty — a bedroom, she’d guess. Wet floor, though — whatever sleeps there likes everything real damp. The other room’s more interesting. It has furnishings: long tables, various heights, no chairs, and a wet floor, too. There’s a lot of weird growing stuff, all different shapes an’ sizes, where you might expect equipment. At’s not sure what most of it is. She thinks it shows the Zardalu preference for fancy biological science and technology, where we and the Cecropians would use machines. That’s what the race memories and old legends about the Zardalu say — they could make biology stand on its head, do with natural growth that we still can’t get near yet. Nothin’ looks dangerous, but it might be. Long tunnel in the middle of the room, spiraling down farther than At can see — way underground, she’d guess from the echoes. Impossible to know how far it might go. And there’s more equipment by the tunnel’s edge. Hold on, she’s changing sonic frequencies. Wants to see if she can get an inside look without goin’ too close.”
There were a few seconds of silence, followed by a startled grunt from Nenda.
“What is it?” Rebka was edging his way farther into the building, propelled by curiosity.
“Somethin’ really impenetrable, At says. Her echolocation is bouncing off it right at the sur
face. Hold on. She’s going to have a feel.”
There was a longer pause, even harder to take, then Rebka heard a rapid shuffle of movement a few yards away in the darkness. “What’s happening?” he asked. As he spoke, Kallik and Nenda popped into sight, with Atvar H’sial just behind.
“See that!” Nenda said as they emerged into the fading light. He was pointing at something that the Cecropian was cradling in her front legs. “An’ you thought we had a mystery before we went in.”
Atvar H’sial extended the object that she was holding out toward Rebka. He stared at it, too surprised and baffled to speak. It was a small black icosahedron about six inches across, as familiar and unmistakable as it was mysterious. He had seen hundreds like it, scattered on free-space structures all around the spiral arm. He had seen them on planets, too, used for every possible purpose — studied in science laboratories, worshiped and feared, used as talismans and royal sigils and doorstops and paperweights.
No one knew how to penetrate one of those objects without causing the interior to melt to an uninformative gray mass. No one knew their purpose, though there were hundreds of suggestions. No one knew how old they were, or how they had reached the places where they were found.
Most workers believed that the black icosahedrons were related to the Builders, although they were on a scale far smaller than the usual artifacts. Analysts had amassed powerful arguments and statistical evidence to support those claims. A few researchers, equally adamant, denied any Builder connection. They argued with some validity for another vanished race, as old as or older than the Builders.
Rebka reached out to take the little regular solid from Atvar H’sial. As he did so there was an urgent whistle of warning from Kallik and a cry of “Behind!”
Rebka spun around. For the past few minutes he had been neglecting his self-imposed task as lookout. The sun was on the horizon, setting in a final glow of pink and gold. It cast four gigantic elongated shadows along the spit of land on which he and the others were standing. And those shadows were moving, as the objects that were throwing them emerged from the water and reared up to their full heights. Behind them, swarming up from the deep offshore, came at least a dozen others.
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