Part 11 (1/2)
I sensed that Eet was in complete agreement with me on that point, and that the ring was in a safe place. But I fretted a little - no place save my own custody really satisfied me.
”Try to use your eyes,” said the Patrolman.
The sensation of being closed in was gone, and a cool wind laden with outdoor scents blew about us. I lifted my lids and blinked rapidly. That sweep of violent red had faded, and though there were some shadowy blotches, I could see blearily.
Not too far away a rude sentry post had been erected from debris of the mine tunnels and blocks of the ruins. There was a beamer mounted on its uneven wall, and at intervals that swept, not toward the tunnel mouths, but across the jumble of ruins, touching the broken walls which had once dammed the river.
”They fear an attack from the natives,” Eet explained.
”Clubs against lasers?” I scoffed.
”Clubs in the night, when one cannot see well - the odds are not as uneven as you think.”
”Why do they not just hole up in their s.h.i.+p?” was my second question.
”They have equipment in the tunnels. Once before they tried retreating into the s.h.i.+p at night. The natives smashed things that could not he repaired - they had to go off world for more.”
”You seem to know a lot about them!” flashed the Patrolman.
”You,” returned Eet in his most insufferable voice, ”are one Celph Hory, ten years with the force. You are a native of Loki, one of four sons, two of whom are dead. You were sent here, not on a routine scout, but to search out the source of a well-sustained rumor that the Guild has made a discovery which will give them superiority in s.p.a.ce. You have orders to keep under cover ( which you did not carry out well, mainly because your s.h.i.+p had been skillfully sabotaged, something you did not discover until you were in orbit here ) and to report back, not revealing your presence to the Guild. Is this not true?”
I heard a breath drawn in sharply. ”You read minds.” Hory made it close to an accusation.
”I merely follow the instinct bred into me, as you follow yours, Hory. Be glad that I do, or you would have been prisoner until Captain Nact.i.tl gave the order for your burning. He was debating the folly of keeping you any longer an hour ago. I would suggest as speedy a withdrawal as possible. These miners have not come upon what they are seeking, but they are close-”
”You found it!” I broke in. By this time I could pick up not only Eet's mental speech but some of his emotions. He was at his smuggest now, suggesting that once again he had bested those physically stronger and bigger.
”So far they look in the wrong place. However, sooner or later that will occur to them. Nact.i.tl is not in the least stupid, and certainly not to be underrated. He has only failed so far because he did not have the right guide.”
The right guide! The ring which Eet had taken, which- which might have drawn him to the source. I wanted to ask questions so badly they choked my throat, buzzed in my head. But if he answered them, then Hory, too, would have that information.
”What have they to find here?” broke in the Patrolman, and I knew he would continue to seek an answer. It all depended now on how much he knew of gems. If I guessed wrongly and he had any training in that field, then my secret was threatened. But again Eet took the lead, giving me a briefing in his reply.
”A source of revenue, which also means power.” It was very easy to forget at such times he was only a small furred creature. His communication was not that of an equal, but soared only too often into patronizing explanations. ”This was a mine of - how many years ago we cannot guess. But I would say the diggings of one of the Forerunner civilizations. Unfortunately for the present-day seekers, they have been picked clean.”
”But you said Nact.i.tl was just not looking in the right place-”
”He searches the old diggings. If he looked among the ruins he might find other clues. Unfortunately we cannot linger to investigate on our own. I would suggest that we find your s.h.i.+p,” he said to Hory, ”and lift as soon as possible. To hide out in this area is unwise. The sniffers are out-”
”Sniffers?”
”The natives; they hunt largely by scent. At any rate the Guild activity here is drawing more and more of them and they have established a ring about the landing field. As yet they are not ready to attack, but they very efficiently serve as a means of confining offworlder activity to this general vicinity. Even to reach your s.h.i.+p will be something of a problem which will increase materially with every pa.s.sing moment. But one man alone is not going to change Captain Nact.i.tl's Mind and-”
I felt Eet's body stiffen, his head go up and forward.
”What is it?”
”We have less time than I had hoped!” His message flashed to us. ”They endeavored to reach your late guard by hand com. When he did not answer they ordered a general alert.”
We had only those few instants of warning. The beamer mounted on the sentry post went into stepped-up action, sweeping its light wider and farther. But bright as it was in the open, it still could not penetrate the hollow pools of shadow which were to be found among the ruins. And we had luckily dropped into one of those.
”To the right-” Eet took over direction. ”Move out at the next sweep.”
”To the left.” Hory was equally insistent. ”My s.h.i.+p-”
”It will not be that easy,” Eet snapped. ”We must go right to eventually win left. And we shall have to go deeper into the fringe of the ruins, maybe even out into the open-”
”Do we cross the river?” To my mind that would be the point of greatest vulnerability. I did not see how we could pa.s.s that under the fire of an alerted camp.
”For so much favor we may thank whatever G.o.ds or powers your species recognizes,” Eet returned. ”Luckily this representative of your law chose to set down on this bank. But it is necessary to flank their post and to avoid any party coming from their s.h.i.+p to reinforce the guard there. Now- right-”
I had been watching the sweep of the beam and it now touched the point farthest from us. So no prompting from Eet was needed to send me scuttling to the next patch of dark I had already marked as a good hiding place. Hory did not leap with me, but my move must have spurred him to action, for he was little behind me in reaching that new lurking place.
Unfortunately the cover seemed designed to lead us farther and farther from our real goal. Yet we could now hear sounds from over the river and see the flash of beamers, which marked a search party setting out from the s.h.i.+p. One of those beamers was set up to illuminate not only their bridge, but a goodly portion of land on our side, an open field of light I saw no way to avoid.
”Not over, but under - at that next hole.” Eet's hind claws dug convulsively into my flesh as I gathered my legs under me, readying for the next dash.
He must mean the next patch of deep shadow, but what his ”under, not over” meant I was not to learn until I reached it, or rather was engulfed in it. For it was not merely a lurking place behind a pile of stones, but indeed a hole, into which I tumbled.
I flung out my arms and my fingers sc.r.a.ped rock on three sides. Then Hory landed half on me, sending me teetering toward the fourth. I did not strike any barrier there as I fought for my balance, my feet in their pack coverings skidding on a smooth stone surface. Again I felt about me. Walls not too far away on either side - but open before. And I heard Hory scuffling behind.
”Ahead-” Eet urged.
”How do you know?” I demanded.
”I know.” He was confident. ”Ahead.”
I felt my way along. I was in a pa.s.sage. Whether it was indeed some runway planned by the builders I did not know. It might have been fas.h.i.+oned by the tumbling of walls. The flooring inclined and I splashed into a pool of water. There was a dank smell which grew thicker as we advanced.
”Where do we travel? Under the river?” I asked.
”No. Though perhaps river water does seep here. Look now to your right”
Ahead was a faint glow which brightened as I slipped and slid on. Through my mind shot a memory of those slime trails within the wreck. Would we find those here also? But at least we could depend upon Eet for a warning- I came to the site of the glow. There was a square opening in the wall to my right where a block had been removed or had fallen out. And through this improvised window, I looked down into a chamber of some size. Down its center ran a table of the same stone as formed the walls, save that this was not so eroded. And set on it were boxes. They had been metal; now they were pitted and worn, and some had fallen into rusty dust, only their outlines marked on the table. But there was one very near to our window which appeared whole, and in it were stones which gave forth feeble sparks of life. The glow which had drawn my attention did not come from those, but from what lay beside the box. Eet uncurled from my shoulders and pa.s.sed in a leap through the window to the surface of the table. He raced along it until he came to the ring, thrusting one of his handpaws through it, using the other to draw it farther up his shoulder like a barbaric armlet.
He made a second leap, back onto the stone ledge of the window, then climbed to my shoulders, stuffing the ring inside my tunic, where it lay, almost too warm for comfort, against my skin.
”What is it?” To my surprise Hory's voice did not come from behind me, but from some distance farther back along the pa.s.sage. ”Where are you? What did you stop for?”
”There is a wall opening here,” Eet reported smoothly. ”But it is of no service to us. The way ahead, however, is clear.”
I was puzzled. I had believed Hory directly on my heels and I had been sure he must have seen what lay in the room. Now it appeared that he had not. But I asked no questions of Eet.
Once more the pa.s.sage sloped - but now up. It was leading us in the direction we had been aiming for. We took it step by careful step. I listened intently and knew the others must be doing the same.
”There are many loose stones ahead,” Eet informed us. ”You must move with the greatest care. But it is not too far now before we reach the fringe of the ruins. Beyond that we have yet to avoid the sniffers.”