Part 10 (1/2)

When Cal stood up from the communicator, the eyes of the crew were on him. Overhearing his conversation with Earth had sobered them, made reality come closer.

”You think it might be a mirage?” Tom asked. ”Some freak air current reflecting from another island and superimposing over this one?” Then he answered himself. ”No. I guess it isn't. There aren't enough discrepancies.”

”Let's pan down to the ground with the scanner,” Cal said. ”Take it slow over the area where the village is supposed to be.”

Glad to be doing something with his hands, Lynwood twisted the controls to take them instantly, in magnification, to a distance slightly above the tops of the trees. The automatic pilot caused the s.h.i.+p to drift with the rotation of the planet, keeping them in fixed relative position.

They scanned the ground rod by rod. There were expanses of heavy tree and bush growth that they could not penetrate. Some of these trees grew where the pictures showed cleared fields, buildings, truck gardens, cattle pastures.

”Those big trees didn't grow up in a month, since the last colonist report,” Louie said positively. He still clung to his belief that it was all a hoax.

Cal made no comment. He was intent on the scanner screen. There were heavy foliage spots, but there were also bare areas covered by a soft, springy turf and patches of wild flowers. But there was no sign of man or his works. There was not so much as a board, the glint of a nail, not a furrow, not even the scar of a campfire. And no indication that there had ever been.

In the sandy patches along the banks of the small meandering river, there was not even a footprint.

They swept the scanner down the valley.

”Wait a minute,” Cal said. ”There are some cows and horses.” He held the scanner fixed while they studied the animals. In two small herds, the animals grazed contentedly near a patch of woods.

”We're in the right time slot, then,” Tom said, with an attempt to pick up the spirit of treating it lightly. ”They've been here. Else the cows and horses wouldn't be.”

”Funny thing about those horses,” Frank commented in a puzzled voice. ”I grew up on a farm. Those are work horses, but field horses always have harness marks on them where the hair gets rubbed off or the skin gets calloused. If they used these horses for work, there ought to be collar and hames rubs on their necks. There ought to be worn streaks left by the traces on their sides. There isn't. Far as the evidence shows, they might have been wild all their lives.”

”Whatever happened didn't seem to hurt them any,” Cal agreed.

He swept the scanner on down the valley to the sandy sh.o.r.e of the sea.

They were close enough to pick up the brown streaks of beached seaweed.

A flock of sh.o.r.e birds were busy running up the sand away from the gentle, beaching waves, then following the water line back down to dig their beaks into the soft, wet sand for food. The birds showed no alarm, no sign of lurking presence near them.

Cal brought the scanner back up the valley and over to one of the ridges bordering it. High on the crest of the ridge, the undergrowth was less luxuriant than down in the valley.

And it was here they caught their first glimpse of a human being.

He was hunkered down behind some rocks at the crest, peering over them at the valley below. From the shape of his shoulders and back, the set of his head, they knew it to be a man. As far as they could tell, he had no clothes on. Apparently they had caught him at the moment of his arrival at the crest.

They watched him turn his head as he looked quickly, then searchingly, up and down the valley. They watched his hand come up to shade his eyes against the light from Ceti as he attempted to see into the dark patches of foliage where the village ought to be.

What he saw, or did not see, seemed to stun him. He squatted, as frozen as a statue for long moments. Then, on hands and knees, they saw him back away from the crest. Now they saw he did not wear even so much as a breechclout. When the height of the ridge concealed him from the other side, he sprang to his feet and began to run, zigzagging in the manner of an obstacle racer to avoid the bushes.

”Looks like they've decided to make a nudist colony of it,” Lynwood commented.

”And faked the pictures so nasty-minded old Earth people wouldn't come out to break it up,” Louie persisted.

”Then why should he be so scared?” Frank asked.

”Notice that patch of bare dirt he's crossing?” Cal asked. ”See the little spurts of dust when he puts his feet down? Now look behind him.”

The three crewmen leaned closer to look over his shoulder at the scanning screen. Cal adjusted it minutely, to get a sharp focus on the ground.