She took out an antique watch and looked at the time, then made a tutting noise and stuffed the watch back in her
pocket. She hated waiting.
She kept walking, heading along the tipped shelf of fused sand towards the hydrofoil. She'd left the ageing,
second-hand craft moored -maybe a little dubiously, now she thought about it - to some indecipherable piece of junk
a hundred paces or so along that unlikely shore. The hydrofoil, its arrowhead shape just a smudge in the dimness,
glittered suddenly as it rocked in the small waves hitting the beach, chrome lines reflecting the ruddy glare of the
day's dying light.
She stopped and looked down at the motley red-brown glass surface, wondering just how thick the layer of fused
silicate was. She kicked at it with the toe of one boot. The blow hurt her toes and the glass looked undamaged. She
shrugged, then turned round and walked the other way.
Her face, seen from a distance, looked calm; only somebody who knew her well would have detected a certain
ominousness about that placidity. Her skin was pale under the sunset's red reflection. Her brows were black curves
under a wide forehead and a crescent of swept-back hair, her eyes large and dark, and her nose long and straight; a
column to support the dark arches of those brows. Her mouth - set in a tight, compressed line was narrow. Wide
cheek bones helped balance a proud jaw.
She sighed once more, and sang the line from the song again under her breath. The tight line of her mouth relaxed
then, becoming small, full lips.
Ahead of her, a couple of hundred paces up the beach, she could see the tall, boxy shape of an old automatic
beachcomber. She walked towards it, eyeing the ancient machine suspiciously. It sat, silent and dark on its rubber
tracks, apparently deactivated for lack of flotsam, waiting for the next tide to provide it with fresh stimulus. Its
battered, decrepit casing was streaked with seabird droppings glowing pink in the sunset light, and while she watched
a foam-white bird landed briefly on the flat top of the machine, sat for a moment then flew away inland.
She took out the old watch again, inspected it and made a little growling noise at the back of her throat. The waves
beat at the margin of the land, hissing like static.
She would walk, she decided, almost as far as the beachcomber, then she would turn round, head back to the
hydrofoil, and go. Whoever had set up the rendezvous probably wasn't coming after all. It might even be a trap, she
thought, glancing round at the line of dunes, old fears returning. Or a hoax; somebody's idea of a joke.
She got within twenty paces of the old beachcombing machine, then turned, walking away with her just-a-little
crippled walk and singing her little, monotonous tune, relic of some-or-other post-atomic.
The rider appeared suddenly on the crest of a large dune, fifty metres to her right. She stopped and stared.
The sand-coloured animal was man-high at its broad, muscled shoulders; its narrow waist held a glittering saddle
and its massive rump was covered in a silvery cloth. It put its great wide tawny head back, reins jingling; it snorted
and stamped its front paws. Its rider, dark on dark against the dull weight of cloud, nudged the big animal forward. It
put its head down and snorted again, testing the shard-fringe where the sand at the top of the dune became glass. The
beast shook its head, then trod carefully down the edge of sand to the hollow between two dunes at the urging of its
rider; his cloak billowed out behind him as though hardly lighter than the air he moved through.
The man muttered something, stuck his heels into the beast's flanks; the animal flinched as the spur terminals
connected and sent little involuntary shivers of muscle movement up its great haunches. It put one broad paw
tentatively onto the glass, then two; its rider made encouraging noises. Still snorting nervously, the animal took a
couple of steps on the inclined deck of the shore, then-with a noise like an enormous whimper-it skidded, tottered,
and sat heavily on its rump, almost unseating its rider. The animal put its head back and roared.
The man jumped quickly from the animal; his long cloak snagged briefly on the high saddle, and he landed
awkwardly on the glass surface, almost falling. His mount was making sudden lurching attempts to get back up,
paws skittering over the slick surface. The man collected his cloak about him and strode purposefully to the woman
who was standing with one hand under the opposite armpit, the other hand up at her forehead, as though shading her
eyes while she looked down at the beach. She was shaking her head.
The man was tall, thin beneath his riding breeches and tight jacket, and had a pale, narrow face, topped with black
curls and edged with a neatly trimmed black beard. He walked up to her. He looked, perhaps, a few years older than
she was.
`Sharrow,' he said, smiling. `Cousin; thank you for coming.' It was a cultured, refined voice, and quiet but
nevertheless assured. He put his hands out to hers, squeezing them briefly then letting go.
'Geis,' she said, looking over his shoulder at the bellowing mount as it finally got shakily to its feet. `What are you
doing with that animal?'
Geis glanced back at the beast. 'Breaking it in,' he said with a grin that slowly faded. `But really it's just a way of
getting here to tell you . . .' He shrugged and gave a small, regretful laugh. `Hell, Sharrow, it's a melodramatic
message; you're in danger.'