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LATER GREEN THOUGHT that if ever the time
came when he should have cracked up, that instant of loss, white and sudden as the
lightning itself, should have been the one.
The others cried out loudly in their grief and shock, but he
was as silent as the empty stone shelf. He could not move nor utter a word; all seemed
hopeless, so what was the use of motion or talk?
Nevertheless, he was human, and human beings hope even when
there is no justification for it. Nor could he remain frozen until the next stroke of
lightning would reveal to the others the state of their leader. He had to act. What
if his actions were meaningless? Mere movement answered for the demands of the body, and
at that moment it was his body that could move. His mind was congealed.
Shouting to the others to scatter and look about in the
brush, but not to scatter too far, he began climbing up the slope of the hill. When he had
reached its top he left the path and plunged into the forest to his right on the theory
that if the yachts were anywhere they must be there. He had two ideas about where they
might be. One was that the Vings had spotted them and had sent in a party aboard a gig to
push them over the side of the island. Thus, when the island had begun its nightly voyage
it had left the 'rollers sitting upon the plain. The other theory was also inspired by the
presence of the Vings. Perhaps the savages had hidden their craft because of just such an
event as his first theory put forth. To do that they would have had to haul the 'rollers
up the less steep slant of the cove.
At the point where he would have looped a rope around a tree
and used it to pull a yacht uphill, he saw all three of the missing craft. They were
nestling side by side just over the lip of the slope, their hulls hidden by brush piled up
before them. Their tall masts, of course, would be taken for tree trunks by anybody but a
very close observer.
Green yelled with joy, then whirled to run back and tell the
others. And slammed into a tree trunk. He picked himself up, swearing because he'd hurt
his nose. And tripped over something and fell again. Thereafter, he seemed to be in a
nightmare of frustration, of conspiracy between tree and night to catch and delay him.
Where his trip up had been easy, his trip back was a continued barking of shins, bumping
of nose, and tearing loose from clutching bushes and thorns. His confusion wasn't at all
helped when the lightning ceased, because he'd been guiding himself by its frequent
flashes. And Lady Luck, alarmed at all the hard knocks she was getting, struggled out of
his shirt pocket and slipped into the forest. He called to her to come back, but she had
had enough of him, for the time being, anyway.
For a brief moment he thought of the fantastic device of
grabbing hold of her tail and following her through the dark. But she was gone, and the
idea wouldn't have worked, anyway. More than likely she'd have turned and bitten his hands
until he released her.
There was nothing to do but make his own way back.
After ten minutes of frantic struggling, during which he
suddenly realized he'd turned the wrong way and was wandering away from the edge of the
island, he saw the clouds disappear. With the bright moon came vision and sanity. He
turned around and in a short time was back at the cove.
"What happened to you?" asked Amra. "We
thought maybe you'd fallen off the edge."
"That's about all that didn't happen," he said,
irritated now that he had been so easily lost. He told them where the yachts were and
added, "We'll have to let one down by a rope before we can connect it to the davits.
It'll take a lot of pushing and pulling, a lot of muscle. Everybody up on the hill,
including the children!"
Wearily, they climbed up the slope to the top and shoved one
of the 'rollers up the slight incline of the depression to the lip of the hill. Green
picked up one of the wet ropes lying on the ground and passed it around the tree. Its
trunk had a groove where many ropes had worn a path during similar operations. One end he
gave to half of the party, putting Miran in charge of them. The other end he tied in a
bowknot to a huge iron eye which projected from the stern of the craft. Then, ordering the
other half of the women to help him push, he got the 'roller over the lip and down the
slope, while the rope gang slowly released the double loop around the tree in short jerks.
When the craft had halted by the davits, Green untied the
rope. His next step would be to back the yacht in between the davits so that he could hook
up its ropes and lift it. Fortunately, there was a winch and cable for this.
Unfortunately, the winch was hand-operated and had been allowed to get rusty. It would
work only with great resistance and with loud squeaking. Not that more noise mattered, for
the party had made so much that only the fact that the wind was from the east could have
kept the savages in ignorance of the survivors' whereabouts.
It was as if his thinking of them had brought them upon the
scene. Grizquetr, who'd been stationed in a tree as a sentinel, called down, "I see a
torch! It's somewhere in the woods, about half a mile away. Oh! There's another one! And
another one!"
Green said, "Do you think they're on the path that
leads here?"
"I don't know. But they're coming this way, winding
here and there, wandering like Samdroo when he was lost in the Mirrored Mazes of
Gil-Ka-Ku, The Black One! Yes, they must be on the path!"
Green began feverishly tying the davit-ropes to the axles of
the craft. He sweated with anxiety and cursed when his fumbling fingers got in the way of
his haste. But the tying of the four bowknots actually took less than a minute, in spite
of the way time seemed to race past him.
That done he had to order off the yacht some of the women
who had climbed aboard. Only the women who had to take care of very small infants and the
older children were to be on that boat.
"Just who do you think is going to work the
winch?" he barked at the too-eager. "Now, jump to it!"
One of the women on the 'roller wailed, "Are you going
to stay on the island and leave us all alone on this 'roller in the midst of the
Xurdimur?"
"No," he answered, as calmly as possible.
"We're going to lower you to the ground. Then we're going back up the hill and shove
the other 'rollers over the edge so that they can't be used by the savages to come after
us. Well jump off and walk back to you."
Seeing that the women were still not convinced and softened
by their pitiable looks, he called to Grizquetr.
"Come down! And get on the boat!"
And when the boy had run down the slope and halted by his
side, breathing hard and looking up at him for his orders, Green said, "I'm
delegating you to guard these women and babies until we arrive. Okay?"
"Okay," said Grizquetr, grinning, his chest
swelling because of the importance of the duty. "I'm captain until you climb aboard,
is that it?"
"You're a captain and a good one too," said Green,
slapping him lightly on the shoulder. Then he ordered the winches turned until the 'roller
was hoisted into the air a few inches. As soon as the rusty machines had groaningly
fulfilled their functions he had the craft lowered over the edge and down to the plain.
The transition was smoothly made; the yacht's wheels began turning; the nose lifted only
slightly because of the superior pull on the ropes tied to the bow; the stern ropes were
paid out a little to equalize the strain; then, obeying Green's gesture, the women aboard
it pulled at the bowknots, which untied simultaneously. Not until then did he breathe a
little easier, for if one or more had refused to slip loose as swiftly as another, the
craft might have been pulled up on one side or dragged around by either end and thus
capsized.
For a few seconds he watched the 'roller slip away, coasting
on its momentum but headed at right angles to the direction of the island. Then it had
stopped, and it began to grow smaller as the island left it behind. From it came the thin
wailing of his daughter Paxi. It broke the spell that momentarily held him. He began
running up the slope, shouting, "Follow me!"
Reaching the crest of the hill ahead of the others, he took
time for a glance through the woods. Sure enough, torches bobbed up and down and flickered
in and out as they passed between tree trunks. And there were drums beating somewhere on
the island.
Lady Luck shot out of the woods, leaped upon Green's knee,
scaled his shirt front and came to rest upon his shoulder. "Ah, you wandering wench,
you," he said, "I knew you couldn't stay away from my irresistible charm, now
could you?"
Lady Luck didn't reply but gazed anxiously at the forest.
"Never fear, my pretty little one," he said.
"They'll not touch a hair of my fine blond head. Nor a silky black one of
yours."
By then the others, puffing and panting, had gained the top
of the hill. He set them to pushing on the stern of a yacht, and in a minute they had sent
it headlong down the hill. When it rushed over the edge and disappeared with a crash on
the plain below they had all they could do to restrain their cheers. Small revenge for the
suffering they'd had to undergo. But it was something.
"Now for the other," said Green. "Then
everybody run as if the demons of Gil-Ka-Ku were on your tails!"
Grunting, they pushed the last 'roller up the little
incline, then gathered their strength for the final heave that would launch it, too, upon
its last voyage.
And at that moment some savages who'd been running ahead of
the torch-bearers burst out of the woods.
Green took one look and realized that they would get between
the edge of the island and his party. There were about ten of them; they not only
outnumbered his own force but were strong men against women. And they had spears, whereas
his people were armed mainly with cutlasses.
Green didn't waste any time in meditation. "Everybody
aboard except Miran and me!" he said loudly. "Don't argue! Get in! We're riding
through them! Lie flat on the deck!"
Screaming, the women scrambled over the low rail and onto
the deck. As soon as the last one was on, the Earthman and Miran put their shoulders to
the stern and pushed. For a second it looked as though their combined strength would not
be enough, as if the party should have shoved the craft a little further over the lip of
the hill before stopping.
"There's not time to get them out again to help
us!" panted Green. "Dig in, Miran, get that fat into gear, shove, damn you,
shove!"
It seemed to him that he was breaking his own collarbone
under the pressure and that he'd never felt such hard and cutting wood in all his life.
And it seemed that the 'roller was stubbornly refusing to move until the cannibals arrived
in time to save it, like the Marines. His legs quivered, and his intestines, he was sure,
were writhing about like snakes, striking here and there against the wall of his belly,
seeking a weak place where they might erupt through into the open air and leave this man
who subjected them to such toil.
There was a shout from the warriors assembled below and a
thud of their feet as they charged up.
"Now or never!" shouted Green.
His face felt like one big blood vessel, and he was sure
that he was going to blow his top, literally. But the 'roller moved forward, crept slowly,
groaned--or was that he?--and began moving swiftly, too swiftly, down the slope. Too
swiftly, because he had to run after it, grab the taffrail and haul himself over. And
while he was doing that be had to extend a hand to Miran, who wasn't as fast on his feet.
Fortunately Amra had presence of mind enough to grab Miran
by the shoulder of his shirt and help pull. Over the rail he came, crying out in pain as
his big stomach burned against the hard mahogany, but not forgetting the bag of jewels
clutched in his hand.
Lady Luck had already deserted her post on Green's shoulder
when he began pushing. Now she meowed softly and pressed against him, scared at the
shaking of the deck and the rumbling of the wheels as the craft sped downhill.
He pulled her to him in the protection of the crook of his
arm, and reared up on his elbow to see what he could see. What he saw was a spear flying
straight at him. It shot by so close he fancied he could feel the sharp edge of its blade
graze him, and there was nothing of his imagination about the woman's scream that rose
immediately afterward. It sounded so much like Amra that he was sure she'd been hit;
however, he had no time to turn and find out. An islander had appeared by the side of the
yacht, and as the deck was on a level with his chest, the fellow could see them all easily
enough. His arm view back, then leaped forward, and the spear he held darted straight at
Green.
No, not at him, but at Lady Luck. Another warrior, a little
further down the slope, screaming something, also thrust at the cat. Evidently felines
were no longer taboo upon this island. The former worshipers considered that their totem
had deserted them and therefore deserved death.
Lady Luck, however, had the traditional nine lives. None of
the razor sharp blades came very close to her. And in the next few seconds the savages
were left howling upon the slope or lying unconscious on the spot where the 'roller had
struck them. The vessel sped down the steep incline, bumped hard as it roared out upon the
stone shelf, and flew into the air. Green flattened himself out against the deck, hoping
thus to dampen the effect of the three-foot drop onto the plain.
Somehow he became separated from the deck, was floating in
the air, and saw the planks rushing up at him.
There was a brief interlude of darkness before Green awoke
and realized that the meeting of the deck and his face had done the latter no good at all
and might have resulted in considerable damage. He was sure of it when he spit out his two
front teeth. However, his pain was overwhelmed in the rush of joy at having escaped. For
the island was retreating across the flat, moonlit Xurdimur while its inhabitants screamed
and jumped with fury and frustration on the rim, unable to bring themselves to leap after
the refugees. Home was where the island was, and they weren't going to get left behind for
the sake of revenge.
"I hope the Vings exterminate you tomorrow,"
muttered Green. Wearily and painfully, he rose to his feet and surveyed what was left of
the Clan Effenycan. Amra was unhurt. If it was she who'd screamed when the spear had
passed over Green, she'd done it from fright. The spear itself was sticking out from the
base of the mast, its head half-buried in the wood.
He climbed over the side and inspected the damage done by
the three-foot drop. One of the wheels had fallen off, and an axle was bent. Shaking his
head, he spoke to the others, "This roller is done for. Let's start walking. We've a
boat to catch."
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