Likewise this vast cave, which they referred to as the
   Refulgence, or the Great Terrace or the Broken Dome,
   amongst several others which he assumed were also
   imposing caves buried deep beneath the mountain
   ranges of Darien. Yet all they would voice was the pre-
   posterous notion that he had been dispatched far into
   the depths of hyperspace to some kind of collapsed con-
   tinuum, the kind of fanciful idea one might hear from
   the shaman of a primitive culture and which he would
   normally have handed over to Harry to deal with.
   But Harry was silent and had been so since that ter-
   rifying ordeal in the Uvovo chamber. As was Rosa's
   intersim device which he had put in his gown pocket
   back at the Gangradur Falls. He knew that the batteries
   were fully charged yet when he turned it on it remained
   inert, unlit, blank, empty.
   Like me, he thought. Without Harry and Rosa I
   feel... alone.
   The path they were following was uneven and strewn
   with gravel, and damp with the water that seeped in
   from above and collected in a myriad little puddles. Up
   ahead, Track-Reski was waving one of its retractable
   stalk-arms at them from a side tunnel out of which a
   pearly runoff trickled.
   'We must take this stone lane,' it said. 'Enemies wait
   further ahead along Refulgence.'
   'Enemies?' Robert said, alarmed.
   'This way leads to the lithosphere of Abfagul,' said
   Tripod-Reski. 'That regime is inimical towards AI mechs
   such as we.'
   'True, but it is even more inimical towards our pur-
   suers,' Track-Reski said.
   'I have seen no pursuers,' Robert said. 'Who are these
   enemies?'
   A humming sound drew near and he turned to see his
   third escort bobbing and gliding along on an air cushion
   generated beneath its oval hull.
   'Enemies behind,' it said. 'Enemies across . . .'
   Gazing across the stalactite-bearded ceiling, Robert
   saw a black shape move in the gloom, long and writhing
   like a snake made of black smoke. As he watched it
   stretched and flowed up to the ceiling and began to
   advance across it.
   'We must go!' said Hover-Reski. 'Go now!'
   Urged on by his escorts and a jolt of unreasoning
   fear, he climbed up the sloping passage, quickly follow
   ing the glowing beams shining from Track-Reski's
   headlamps, gradually slowing as his strength ebbed. Yet
   still he stumbled along as the passage widened, its walls
   rising higher, and became a rocky path winding along
   the bottom of a long, gloomy fissure while an irregular,
   semi-musical clanging noise went on far above. Soon
   the narrow path became a tunnel again, which dipped
   downwards for a stretch, took an odd twist and turned
   back upwards, its dank darkness broken by the escort-
   ing mechs' wavering lamp beams.
   A grey oval emerged from the dark up ahead and
   soon Robert was clambering out of a hole on a grassy
   slope dotted with huge, mossy boulders. A thick, grey
   mist hung low in the cold, still air and the light was
   meagre and diffuse, like twilight or pre-dawn. Off to
   one side was a still, reflective pool of water, over which
   a group of odd insects with long writhing tendrils
   buzzed and spun and danced. Feeling weary he sat on
   the ground, heedless of the damp grass, watching the
   insects as he got his breath back.
   'This is the lithosphere of Abfagul,' said Tripod-Reski
   as it presented to Robert a square tablet of the fibrous
   ration that the mechs had been feeding him since his
   arrival.
   'Who or what is Abfagul?' Robert said as he bit and
   chewed.
   'Species and hierarchy,' said Hover-Reski as it glided
   past, heading downslope to scout further ahead.
   'Are they native to Darien?' Robert said. 'This climate
   feels as if it could be on the same latitude as the colony, yet
   I've seen no mention of another established culture ...'
   'Our apologies, Human Horst,' said Track-Reski, set-
   ting down a thin beaker of water for him. 'We cannot
   answer your queries - falsifying your frame of reference
   may have unwanted consequences.'
   Robert frowned and drank the water, resenting the
   comment.
   'You have offered no proof that we are in some deep
   level of hyperspace, as if the universe were built of
   layers!' He gestured around him. 'This seems like out-
   doors in a temperate climate, yet you call it a, what, a
   lithosphere?'
   'This lithosphere is one of several in this particular
   stratum,' said Tripod-Reski. 'Some of the others are
   almost on planetary-body scales, and thus prone to
   entropo-pressure collapse. This one is only about I
   thousand miles in diameter . . .'
   'All right,' Robert said, angry yet willing to humour
   his companions. 'Let's say that hyperspace is another
   kind of universe . . .'
   'Universes,' said Hover-Reski, emerging from behind
   a large split boulder.
   'The desiccated remains of dead universes sink down
   into hyperspace and accrete in a sedimentary fashion,'
   said Track-Reski. 'Do we have time to explain the struc-
   ture of the Strativerse?'
   'No,' said Hover- and Tripod-Reski in unison.
   'Then why have I been abducted?' Robert said, sud-
   denly angry at this ridiculous situation and wishing
   Harry was here.
   'Only the Construct can tell you that,' said Tripod
   Reski. 'And the sooner we reach the upgate, the sooner
   you will know.'
   After that they said little of substance as Robert
   allowed himself to be steered across an austere, hilly
   landscape veiled in an unending, misty dusk. Now and
   then, mournful, ululating cries reverberated through the
   sky overhead and once they heard something answer
   from far off behind them, a harsh implacable sound.
   Not long after they heard the same harsh call but now
   from ahead and away to the left.
   'Hunters are out,' said Hover-Reski.
   'Are they hunting us?' Robert said, suddenly anx-
   ious.
   'They hunt anything that strays into their sphere,'
   said Track-Reski. 'Luckily, the stone lane to the Great
   Terrace awaits us on the other side of the next hill . . .'
   Robert could feel his heart hammering and his throat
   ached from the quickness of his breath, but he felt relief
   when a tunnel entrance came into view. The three mechs
   paused on the crest of the hill to scan and map the
   immediate area before beginning their descent. They had
   all gone a few yards when the mechs suddenly leaped
   ahead, dashing downslope.
   'Quickly, Human Horst!' said one. 'Hostile is closing!'
   'But . . . where?' Robert said, breaking into a run,
   looking to either side and seeing nothing.
   'Above!'
   All he could do was snatch the briefest of upwards
   glances and almost stumbled when he saw the winged
   horror that was plumm
eting towards them, a writhing
   monstrosity of eyeless, snapping heads, hooked tentacles
   and clutching claws. The mechs were now only slightly
   ahead of him and they reached the mouth of the tunnel
   and dived inside just as the monster landed heavily and,
   with a deafening, multi-throated roar, threw itself after
   them.
   Gasping and wheezing from the effort, Robert stag-
   gered to a halt to lean against the tunnel wall and get his
   breath back.
   'Keep running, Human Horst!' said Tripod-Reski.
   '... sorry . .. need to ...'
   The little mech grabbed the flapping hem of his gown
   and pulled at it with surprising strength. In the next
   moment the tunnel shook as the winged monster
   rammed itself up against the entrance, claws tearing at
   its edges while tentacles tipped with gleaming pincers
   and fanged mouths snaked forward. The tunnel floor
   trembled, stones and clumps of earth fell from its roof,
   and now all three mechs were urging Robert to retreat.
   'Back to solid rock, human Horst,' said Track-Reski.
   'Before entrance collapses.'
   The grotesque beast was grinding and gouging the
   tunnel wider, howling with a dozen mouths as it tried to
   wedge itself further along. Running and stumbling along-
   side the mechs, Robert heard the deep rumble of a cave-in
   from behind, followed by a muffled roar of hate and fury.
   Clouds of dust puffed up from the collapse, and several
   yards on Robert's knees gave way and he sat down in the
   dirt, legs akimbo, gasping for breath, massaging a pain in
   his side.
   'What was ... that.. . thing} .. .'
   'Abfagul,' said Hover-Reski as it hummed off downs-
   lope. 'Small one ...'
   48
   CATRIONA
   The hunt was nearing its conclusion. She and her
   troupe, two Listeners and eighteen Scholars, had paused
   up in the subcanopy to await the arrival of another
   Listener and five Scholars from Seacloud on the north-
   ern coast. They were some 900 feet above the forest
   floor with the light of day waning, golden yellow shad-
   ing into amber and filtering down through Segrana's
   leafy veils. Gloom was already seeping into the cooling
   depths, but Cat knew where their quarries were because
   her eyes had other eyes to help her—
   From its perch on a low, leafy branch, the kizpi
   watches the clearing. A crouching, camouflaged figure
   creeps slowly through the undergrowth at one side, its
   featureless armoured head moving from side to side to
   360 its sensor sweep, its short-bodied and undoubtedly
   lethal weapon held two-handed and aimed forward.
   Eyes that she could search for and with, but only for
   short spans of time - using these small creatures like
   this panicked them, causing them to dart away into the
   shadows. But now, some 30 yards west of the kizpi, she
   had found an umisk, a flighted lizard with excellent eye-
   sight and hearing. It had just caught and eaten a large,
   juicy insect and had paused on a branch to preen a few
   dislodged feathers when movement below snared its
   attention—
   Ghosting through undergrowth with precise steps,
   the intruder stops to scan its surroundings, around and
   above. The diminishing light gleams dully on the
   helmet visor as it turns and tilts up, arms raising the
   weapon along the same line of sight. Its short barrel
   gives the tiniest of jerks along with a quiet, flicking
   sound, and an arboreal animal, grazer or hunter, falls
   to the forest floor with a rustling thud. The intruder
   moves on.
   Cat let the umisk slip away, aware of the many other
   small beasts going about their business in that earthy
   darkness. It was actually possible to use her bonds with
   Segrana to call on the senses of all creatures in the forest
   surrounding the Ezgara, thereby studying it in the
   round, but there would be little advantage to it. Besides,
   such an act would leave her weak and mentally exhausted
   when right now she needed all of her faculties, both old
   and new.
   'They know we're here,' she told the Listener who sat
   on the branch next to her.
   'Will they be aware of what we have done to their
   devices?' said Listener Malir, a Warrior Uvovo from
   Overstream.
   It had only been hours since scouts discovered
   charges set against the central pillar-trees of three main
   buttress clusters, the outer north, outer northeast, and
   outer east. With the use of potent acid (from several
   poroon beetles) and quick-setting syldu sap, the trigger
   mechanisms were rendered inert. But Cat was sure that
   these Ezgara were getting scanning and update infor-
   mation from somewhere, possibly a small satellite left in
   orbit which could also provide links to their bombs.
   When they were disarmed, some alarm might have been
   set off, warning the commandos that their presence had
   been detected. Hence their high state of alertness as they
   headed southwest, straight towards Pilipoint Station.
   A lanky Uvovo swung down from an adjacent tree to
   join Cat and Listener Malir.
   'Honourable Listener and Pathmistress,' he said, eyes
   wide. 'The Seacloud Listener approaches.'
   That was what they were calling her - Pathmistress.
   She didn't like it but the Listeners of Highsonglade had
   decided on it soon after waking from the Segrana-sent
   dream they had all undergone. And when she went out
   into Segrana's dense heartlands she found that the
   dream had not been a localised event. It helped when
   she needed information and scouts but made her feel a
   kind of responsibility she had never experienced before.
   But she was able to put that to one side and focus on her
   task, the bargain she had made, the protection of
   Segrana and the People of the Leaves.
   The Listener from Seacloud was called Okass and his
   five Scholars were all armed with fishcatcher whips with
   which, they asserted, they could snatch a weapon from
   unaware hands in the blink of an eye. She decided to
   send them with Malir and his seven Scholars while she
   accompanied the other Listener, Juso from Skygarden,
   whose eleven were skilled with nets.
   Malir and Okass moved away and downwards, fol-
   lowing Cat's directions towards the more westerly of
   the two intruders while she and Juso went after the
   other. While the Uvovo could travel with swift agility,
   Cat was forced to make do with a trictra, strapping into
   the leathery harness then following on through the inter-
   woven branches and lichenous curtains of vines. Her
   strange connection to Segrana allowed her to catch
   glimpses of the two quarries as well as the Uvovo con-
   verging on them, and it was soon apparent that the
   Ezgara knew what was happening. Abandoning stealth,
   both were charging full-tilt through the forest, with 1 he
   Uvovo leaping from tree to tree and gaining on them.
   And it was Malir and Okass's Scholars who pounced
   first, seeking to snare the intruder's feet and disarm him
   in one fell swoop. But the Ezgara proved wily, jumped
   the hook-tipped whip meant for his ankles, ducked and
   rolled under the one coming for his compact rifle. Then
   sprayed the forest to either side with arcs of needles or
   spines from the smaller weapons held in his lower hands.
   Someone shrieked in agony and fell but the hunt contin-
   ued.
   Catriona lost track of the chase then - most small
   animals had fled the immediate area, frightened by the
   violence. Moments later she heard a harsh, muffled
   buzz coming in short bursts. More cries, then an
   uneasy silence. She scoured the nearby forest from the
   depths to the heights and found a long-backed vithni a
   female out hunting for her cubs. It was easy to per-
   suade her that tasty grubs lay in a certain direction
   and soon -
   The vithni clambers along a series of low branches,
   keeping pace with the party of exultant Uvovo who are
   carrying a bound figure on their shoulders. Its helmet
   and armoured jacket are missing and Cat is astonished
   to see that the Ezgara has a very Humanlike face, well-
   proportioned male features with calm grey eyes gazing
   fixedly upwards. The man does not struggle yet a certain
   intensity emerges in his face, the eyes beginning to widen
   and stare, the lips drawing back from the teeth, a
   flushed hue spreading red and mottled over the skin.
   Then his head starts to tremble, his eyes show the
   whites, he smiles and fire blooms in his mouth before an
   explosion blots out everything
   The bond with the vithni vanished and a thunderous
   detonation reverberated through the forest. Cat gasped
   at the severed connection, gasping for breath, almost
   stunned with disbelief. The spidery trictra beneath her
   shifted nervously while she tried to calm herself in the
   face of this new horror. A suicide self-destruct - was
   this another example of Sendrukan cruelty?
   'Quickly,' she said to the Scholar escorting her. 'Rush
   ahead and tell Juso that I want him to hold back, leave
   the intruder alone but keep tracking him.'
   The young Scholar nodded eagerly and was off, dis-
   appearing into the shadowy trees while Cat urged the
   trictra on. Cries of pain filtered through the forest from
   
 
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