Andre Norton - Warlock Trilogy - Storm over Warlock

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WARLOCK Trilogy
by ANDRE NORTON
Table of Contents
STORM OVER WARLOCK
* 1 : DISASTER
* 2 : DEATH OF A SHIP
* 3 : TO CLOSE RANKS
* 4 : SORTIE
* 5 : PURSUIT
* 6 : THE HOUND
* 7 : UNWELCOME GUIDE
* 8 : UTGARD
* 9 : ONE ALONE
* 10 : A TRAP FOR A TRAPPER
* 11 : THE WITCH
* 12 : THE VEIL OF ILLUSION
* 13 : HE WHO DREAMS . . .
* 14 : ESCAPE
* 15 : DRAGON SLAYER
* 16 : THIRD PRISONER
* 17 : THROG JUSTICE
* 18 : STORM’S ENDING
ORDEAL IN OTHERWHERE
* I
* II
* III
* IV
* V
* VI
* VII
* VIII
* IX
* X
* XI
* XII
* XIII
* XIV
* XV
* XVI
* XVII
* XVIII
FORERUNNER FORAY
* PREFACE
* 1
* 2
* 3
* 4
* 5
* 6
* 7
* 8
* 9
* 10
* 11
* 12
* 13
* 14
* 15
* 16
* 17
STORM OVER
WARLOCK
1 : DISASTER
The Throg task force struck the Terran Survey camp without warning a few minutes after dawn. The alien
invaders sent eye-searing lances of energy flashing back and forth across the base with methodical
accuracy. And a single cowering witness, flattened on a ledge in the heights above, knew that when the last
of those yellow-red bolts fell, nothing human would be left alive down there. His teeth clamped hard upon
the thick stuff of the sleeve covering his thin forearm, and a scream of terror and rage was stillborn in his
heart.
More than caution kept him pinned on that narrow shelf of rock. Watching that holocaust below, Shann
Lantee could not force himself to move. The sheer ruthlessness of the Throg attack left him momentarily
weak. To listen to a tale of Throgs in action, and to be an eyewitness to such action, were two vastly
different things. He shivered in spite of the warmth of the Survey Corps uniform.
As yet he had sighted none of the aliens, only their plateshaped flyers. They would stay aloft until their
long-range weapon cleared out all opposition. But how had they been able to annihilate the Terran force so
completely? The last report had placed the nearest Throg nest at least two systems away from Warlock.
And a patrol lane had been drawn about the Circe system the minute that Survey had marked its second
planet ready for colonization. Somehow the beetles had slipped through that supposedly tight cordon and
would now consolidate their gains with their usual speed. Once their energy attack finished the small
Terran force, then they would simply take over.
A month later, or maybe two months, and they could not have done it. The grids would have been up, and
any Throg ship venturing into Warlock’s amber-tinted sky would abruptly cease to be. In the race for
survival as a galactic power, Terra had that one small edge over the swarms of the enemy. They need only
stake out their new-found world and get the grids assembled on its surface; then that planet would be
locked to the beetles. The critical period was between the first discovery of a suitable colony world and the
completion of grid control. Planets in the past had been lost during that time lag, just as Warlock was being
lost now.
Throgs and Terrans . . . For more than a century now, planet time, they had been fighting their bitter war
among the stars. Terrans hunted worlds for colonization, the old hunger for land of their own driving men
from the overpopulated worlds, out of Sol’s system to the far stars. And those worlds barren of intelligent
native life, open to settlers, were none too many and widely scattered. Perhaps half a dozen were found in a
quarter century, and of that six maybe only one was suitable for human life without any costly and lengthy
adaptation of man or world. Warlock was one of the lucky finds which came so seldom.
Throgs were predators, living on the loot they garnered. As yet, mankind had not been able to discover
whether they did indeed swarm from any home world. Perhaps they lived eternally on board their plate
ships with no permanent base, forced into a wandering life by the destruction of the planet on which they
had originally been spawned. But they were raiders now, laying waste to defenseless worlds, picking up
the wealth of shattered cities in which no native life remained. Although their hidden temporary bases were
looped about the galaxy, their need for worlds with an atmosphere similar to Terra’s was as necessary as
that of man. For in spite of their grotesque insectile bodies, their wholly alien minds, the Throgs were
warm-blooded, oxygen-breathing creatures.
After the first few clashes the early Terran explorers had endeavored to promote a truce between the
species, only to discover that between Throg and man there appeared to be no meeting ground at all—a
total difference of mental processes producing insurmountable misunderstanding. There was simply no
point of communication. So the Terrans had suffered one smarting defeat after another until they perfected
the grid. And now their colonies were safe, at least when time worked in their favor.
It had not on Warlock.
A last vivid lash of red cracked over the huddle of domes in the valley. Shann blinked, half blinded by that
glare. His jaws ached as he unclenched his teeth. That was the finish. Breathing raggedly, he raised his
head, beginning to realize that he was the only one of his kind left alive on a none-too-hospitable world
controlled by enemies—without shelter or supplies.
He edged back into the narrow cleft which was the entrance to the ledge. As a representative of his species
he was not impressive, and now, with those shudders he could not master shaking his thin body, he looked
even smaller and more vulnerable. Shann drew his knees up close under his chin. The hood of his
woodsman’s jacket was pushed back in spite of the chill of the morning, and he wiped the back of his hand
across his lips and chin in an oddly childish gesture.
None of the men below who had been alive only minutes earlier had been close friends of his. Shann had
never known anyone but acquaintances in his short, roving life. Most people had ignored him completely
except to give orders, and one or two had been actively malicious—like Garth Thorvald. Shann grimaced
at a certain recent memory, and then that grimace faded into wonder. If young Thorvald hadn’t
purposefully tried to get Shann into trouble by opening the wolverines’ cage, Shann wouldn’t be here
now—alive and safe for a time—he’d have been down there with the others.
The wolverines! For the first time since Shann had heard the crackle of the Throg attack he remembered
the reason he had been heading into the hills. Of all the men on the Survey team, Shann Lantee had been
the least important. The dirty, tedious clean-up jobs, the dull routines which required no technical training
but which had to be performed to keep the camp functioning comfortably, those had been his portion. And
he had accepted that status willingly, just to have a chance to be included among Survey personnel. Not
that he had the slightest hope of climbing up to even an S-E-Three rating in the service.
Part of those menial activities had been to clean the animal cages. And there Shann Lantee had found
something new, something so absorbing that most of the tiring dull labor had ceased to exist except as
tasks to finish before he could return to the fascination of the animal runs.
Survey teams had early discovered the advantage of using mutated and highly trained Terran animals as
assistants in the exploration of strange worlds. From the biological laboratories and breeding farms on
Terra came a trickle of specialized assistants to accompany man into space. Some were fighters, silent,
more deadly than weapons a man wore at his belt or carried in his hands. Some were keener eyes, keener
noses, keener scouts than the human kind could produce. Bred for intelligence, for size, for adaptability to
alien conditions, the animal explorers from Terra were prized.
Wolverines, the ancient “devils” of the northlands on Terra, were being tried for the first time on Warlock.
Their caution, a quality highly developed in their breed, made them testers for new territory. Able to tackle
in battle an animal three times their size, they should be added protection for the man they accompanied
into the wilderness. Their wide ranging, their ability to climb and swim, and above all, their curiosity were
significant assets.
Shann had begun contact by cleaning their cages; he ended captivated by these miniature bears with long
bushy tails. And to his unbounded delight the attraction was mutual. Alone to Taggi and Togi he was a
person, an important person. Those teeth, which could tear flesh into ragged strips, nipped gently at his
fingers. They closed without any pressure on arm, even on nose and chin in what was the ultimate caress of
their kind. Since they were escape artists of no mean ability, twice he had had to track and lead them back
to camp from forays of their own devising.
But the second time he had been caught by Fadakar, the chief of animal control, before he could lock up
the delinquents. And the memory of the resulting interview still had the power to make him flush with
impotent anger. Shann’s explanation had been contemptuously brushed aside, and he had been delivered an
ultimatum. If his carelessness occurred again, he would be sent back on the next supply ship, to be
dismissed without an official sign-off on his work record, thus locked out of even the lowest level of
Survey for the rest of his life.
That was why Garth Thorvald’s act of the night before had made Shann brave the unknown darkness of
Warlock alone when he had discovered that the test animals were gone. He had to locate and return them
before Fadakar made his morning inspection; Garth Thorvald’s attempt to get him into bad trouble had
saved his life.
Shann cowered back, striving to make his huddled body as small as possible. One of the Throg flyers
appeared silently out of the misty amber of the morning sky, hovering over the silent camp. The aliens
were coming in to inspect the site of their victory. And the safest place for any Terran now was as far from
the vicinity of those silent domes as he could get. Shann’s slight body was an asset as he wedged through
the narrow mouth of a cleft and so back into the cliff wall. The climb before him he knew in part, for this
was the path the wolverines had followed on their two other escapes. A few moments of tricky scrambling
and he was out in a cuplike depression choked with the purple-leaved brush of Warlock. On the other side
of that was a small cut to a sloping hillside, giving on another valley, not as wide as that in which the camp
stood, but one well provided with cover in the way of trees and high-growing bushes.
A light wind pushed among the trees, and twice Shann heard the harsh, rasping call of a clak-clak—one of
the batlike leather-winged flyers that laired in pits along the cliff walls. That present snap of two-tone
complaint suggested that the land was empty of strangers. For the clak-claks vociferously and loudly
resented encroachment on their chosen hunting territory.
Shann hesitated. He was driven by the urge to put as much distance between him and the landing Throg
ship as he could. But to arouse the attention of inquisitive clak-claks was asking for trouble. Perhaps it
would be best to keep on along the top of the cliff, rather than risk a descent to take cover in the valley the
flyers patrolled.
A patch of dust, sheltered by a tooth-shaped projection of rock, gave the Terran his first proof that Taggi
and his mate had preceded him, for printed firmly there was the familiar paw mark of a wolverine. Shann
began to hope that both animals had taken to cover in the wilderness ahead.
He licked dry lips. Having left secretly without any emergency pack, he had no canteen, and now Shann
inventoried his scant possessions—a field kit, heavy-duty clothing, a short hooded jacket with attached
mittens, the breast marked with the Survey insignia. His belt supported a sheathed stunner and bush knife,
and seam pockets held three credit tokens, a twist of wire intended to reinforce the latch of the wolverine
cage, a packet of bravo tablets, two identity and work cards, and a length of cord. No rations—save the
bravos—no extra charge for his stunner. But he did have, weighing down a loop on the jacket, a small
power torch.
The path he followed ended abruptly in a cliff drop, and Shann made a face at the odor rising from below,
even though that scent meant he could climb down to the valley floor here without fearing any clak-clak
attention. Chemical fumes from a mineral spring funneled against the wall, warding off any nesting in this
section.
Shann drew up the hood of his jacket and snapped the transparent face mask into place. He must get
away—then find food, water, a hiding place. That will to live which had made Shann Lantee fight
innumerable battles in the past was in command, bracing him with a stubborn determination.
The fumes swirled up in a smoke haze about his waist, but he strode on, heading for the open valley and
cleaner air. That sickly lavender vegetation bordering the spring deepened in color to the normal purple-
green, and then he was in a grove of trees, their branches pointed skyward at sharp angles to the rust-red
trunks.
A small skitterer burst from moss-spotted ground covering, giving an alarmed squeak, skimming out of
sight as suddenly as it had appeared. Shann squeezed between two trees and then paused. The trunk of the
larger was deeply scored with scratches dripping viscous gobs of sap, a sap which was a bright froth of
scarlet. Taggi had left his mark here, and not too long ago.
The soft carpet of moss showed no paw marks, but he thought he knew the goal of the animals—a lake
down-valley. Shann was beginning to plan now. The Throgs had not blasted the Terran camp entirely out
of existence; they had only made sure of the death of its occupiers. Which meant they must have some use
for the installations. For the general loot of a Survey field camp would be relatively worthless to those who
picked over the treasure of entire cities elsewhere. Why? What did the Throgs want? And would the alien
invaders continue to occupy the domes for long?
Shann was still reeling from the shock of the Throgs’ ruthless attack. But from early childhood, when he
had been thrown on his own to scratch a living—a borderline existence of a living—on the Dumps of Tyr,
he had had to use his wits to keep life in a scrawny and undersized body. However, since he had been
eating regularly from Survey rations, he was not quite so scrawny anymore.
His formal education was close to zero, his informal and off-center schooling vast. And that particular
toughening process which had been working on him for years now aided in his speedy adaptation to a new
set of facts, formidable ones. He was alone on a strange and perhaps hostile world. Water, food, safe
shelter, those were important now. And once again, away from the ordered round of the camp where he
had been ruled by the desires and requirements of others, he was thinking, planning in freedom. Later (his
hand went to the butt of his stunner) perhaps later he might just find a way of extracting an accounting
from the beetle-heads, too.
For the present, he would have to keep away from the Throgs, which meant well away from the camp. A
fleck of green showed through the amethyst foliage before him—the lake! Shann wriggled through a last
bush barrier and stood to look out over that surface. A sleek brown head bobbed up. Shann put fingers to
his mouth and whistled. The head turned, black button eyes regarded him, short legs began to churn water.
To his relief the swimmer was obeying his summons.
Taggi came ashore, pausing on the fine gray sand of the verge to shake himself vigorously. Then the
wolverine ran upslope at a clumsy gallop to Shann. With an unknown feeling swelling inside him the
Terran went down on both knees, burying both hands in the coarse brown fur, warming to the uproarious
welcome Taggi gave him.
“Togi?” Shann asked as if the other could answer. He gazed back to the lake, but Taggi’s mate was
nowhere in sight.
The blunt head under his hand swung around, black button nose pointed north. Shann had never been sure
just how intelligent, as mankind measured intelligence, the wolverines were. He had come to suspect that
Fadakar and the other experts had underrated them and that both beasts understood more than they were
given credit for. Now he followed an experiment of his own, one he had had a chance to try only a few
times before and never at length. Pressing his palm flat on Taggi’s head, Shann thought of Throgs and of
their attack, trying to arouse in the animal a corresponding reaction to his own horror and anger.
And Taggi responded. A mutter became a growl, teeth gleamed—those cruel teeth of a carnivore to whom
they were weapons of aggression. Danger . . . Shann thought “danger.” Then he raised his hand, and the
wolverine shuffled off, heading north. The man followed.
They discovered Togi busy in a small cove where a jagged tangle of drift made a mat dating from the last
high-water period. She was finishing a hearty breakfast, the remains of a water rat which she was burying
thriftily against future need after the instincts of her kind. When she was done she came to Shann, inquiry
plain to read in her eyes.
There was water here, and good hunting. But the site was too close to the Throgs. Let one of their
exploring flyers sight them, and the little group was finished. Better cover, that’s what the three fugitives
must have. Shann scowled, not at Togi, but at the landscape. He was tired and hungry, but he must keep on
going.
A stream fed into the cove from the west, a guide of sorts. With very little knowledge of the countryside,
Shann was inclined to follow that.
Overhead the sun made its usual golden haze of the sky. A flight of vivid green streaks marked a flock of
lake ducks coming for a morning feeding. Lake duck was good eating, but Shann had no time to hunt one
now. Togi started down the bank of the stream, Taggi behind her. Either they had caught his choice subtly
through some undefined mental contact, or they had already picked that road on their own.
Shann’s attention was caught by a piece of the drift. He twisted the length free and had his first weapon of
his own manufacture, a club. Using it to hold back a low sweeping branch, he followed the wolverines.
Within the half hour he had breakfast, too. A pair of limp skitterers, their long hind feet lashed together
with a thong of grass, hung from his belt. They were not particularly good eating, but at least they were
meat.
The three, man and wolverines, made their way up the stream to the valley wall and through a feeder ravine
into the larger space beyond. There, where the stream was born at the foot of a falls, they made their first
camp. Judging that the morning haze would veil any smoke, Shann built a pocket-size fire. He seared
rather than roasted the skitterers after he had made an awkward and messy business of skinning them, and
tore the meat from the delicate bones in greedy mouthfuls. The wolverines lay side by side on the gravel,
now and again raising a head alertly to test the scent on the air, or gaze into the distance.
Taggi made a warning sound deep in the throat. Shann tossed handfuls of sand over the dying fire. He had
only time to fling himself face-down, hoping the drab and weathered cloth of his uniform would fade into
the color of the earth on which he lay, every muscle tense.
A shadow swung across the hillside. Shann’s shoulders hunched, and he cowered again. That terror he had
known on the ledge was back in full force as he waited for the beam to lick at him as it had earlier at his
fellows. The Throgs were on the hunt . . .
2 : DEATH OF A SHIP
That sigh of displaced air was not as loud as a breeze, but it echoed monstrously in Shann’s ears. He could
not believe in his luck as that sound grew fainter, drew away into the valley he had just left. With infinite
caution he raised his head from his arm, still hardly able to accept the fact that he had not been sighted, that
the Throgs and their flyer were gone.
But that black plate was spinning out into the sun haze. One of the beetles might have suspected that there
were Terran fugitives and ordered a routine patrol. After all, how could the aliens know that they had
caught all but one of the Survey party in camp? Though with all the Terran scout flitters grounded on the
field, the men dead in their bunks, the surprise would seem to be complete.
As Shann moved, Taggi and Togi came to life also. They had gone to earth with speed, and the man was
sure that both beasts had sensed danger. Not for the first time he knew a burning desire for the formal
education he had never had. In camp he had listened, dragging out routine jobs in order to overhear reports
and the small talk of specialists keen on their own particular hobbies. But so much of the information
Shann had thus picked up to store in a retentive memory he had not understood and could not fit together.
It had been as if he were trying to solve some highly important puzzle with at least a quarter of the
necessary pieces missing, or with unrelated bits from others intermixed. How much control did a trained
animal scout have over his furred or feathered assistants? And was part of that mastery a mental rapport
built up between man and animal?
How well would the wolverines obey him now, especially when they would not return to camp where
cages stood waiting as symbols of human authority? Wouldn’t a trek into the wilderness bring about a
revolt for complete freedom? If Shann could depend upon the animals, it would mean a great deal. Not
only would their superior hunting ability provide all three with food, but their scouting senses, so much
keener than his, might erect a slender wall between life and death.
Few large native beasts had been discovered on Warlock by the Terran explorers. And of those four or five
different species, none had proved hostile if unprovoked. But that did not mean that somewhere back in the
wild lands into which Shann was heading there were not heretofore unknowns, perhaps slyer and as
vicious as the wolverines when they were aroused to rage.
Then there were the “dreams,” which had afforded the prime source of camp discussion and dispute. Shann
brushed coarse sand from his boots and thought about the dreams. Did they or did they not exist? You
could start an argument any time by making a definite statement for or against the peculiar sort of dreaming
reported by the first scout to set ship on this world.
The Circe system, of which Warlock was the second of three planets, had first been scouted four years ago
by one of those explorers traveling solo in Survey service. Everyone knew that the First-In Scouts were a
weird breed, almost a mutation of Terran stock—their reports were rife with strange observations.
So an alarming one concerning Circe, a solar-type yellow sun, and her three planets was no novelty. Witch,
the world nearest in orbit to Circe, was too hot for human occupancy without drastic and too costly world-
changing. Wizard, the third out from the sun, was mostly bare rock and highly poisonous water. But
Warlock, swinging through space between two forbidding neighbors, seemed to be just what the settlement
board ordered.
Then the Survey scout, even in the cocoon safety of his well-armed ship, began to dream. And from those
dreams a horror of the apparently empty world developed, until he fled the planet to preserve his sanity.
There had been a second visit to Warlock to confirm this—worlds so well adapted to human emigration
could not be lightly thrown away. But this time the report was negative. There was no trace of dreams, no
registration of any outside influence on the delicate and complicated equipment the ship carried. So the
Survey team had been dispatched to prepare for the coming of the first pioneers, and none of them had
dreamed either—at least, no more than the ordinary dreams all men accepted.
Only there were those who pointed out that the seasons had changed between the first and second visits to
Warlock. That first scout had planeted in summer; his successors had come in fall and winter. They argued
that the final release of world for settlement should not be given until the full year on Warlock had been
sampled.
But pressure from Emigrant Control had forced their hands, that and the fear of just what had eventually
happened—an attack from the Throgs. So they had speeded up the process of declaring Warlock open.
Only Ragnar Thorvald had protested that decision up to the last and had gone back to headquarters on the
supply ship a month ago to make a last appeal for a more careful study.
Shann stopped brushing the sand from the tough fabric above his knee. Ragnar Thorvald . . . He
remembered back to the port landing apron on another world, remembered with a sense of loss he could
not define. That had been about the second biggest day of his short life; the biggest had come earlier when
they had actually allowed him to sign on for Survey duty.
He had tumbled off the cross-continent cargo carrier, his kit—a very meager kit—slung over his thin
shoulder, a hot eagerness expanding inside him until he thought that he could not continue to throttle down
that wild happiness. There was a waiting starship. And he—Shann Lantee from the Dumps of Tyr, without
any influence or schooling—was going to blast off in her, wearing the brown-green uniform of Survey!
Then he had hesitated, had not quite dared cross the few feet of apron lying between him and that compact
group wearing the same uniform—with a slight difference, that of service bars and completion badges and
rank insignia—with the unconscious self-assurance of men who had done this many times before.
But after a moment that whole group had become in his own shy appraisal just a background for one man.
Shann had never before known in his pinched and limited childhood, his lost boyhood, anyone who
aroused in him hero worship. And he could not have put a name to the new emotion that added so suddenly
to his burning desire to make good, not only to hold the small niche in Survey which he had already so
painfully achieved, but to climb, until he could stand so in such a group talking easily to that tall man, his
uncovered head bronze-yellow in the sunlight, his cool gray eyes pale in his brown face.
Not that any of those wild dreams born in that minute or two had been realized in the ensuing months.
Probably those dreams had always been as wild as the ones reported by the first scout on Warlock. Shann
grinned wryly now at the short period of childish hope and half-confidence that he could do big things.
Only one Thorvald had ever noticed Shann’s existence in the Survey camp, and that had been Garth.
Garth Thorvald, a far less impressive—one could say “smudged”—copy of his brother. Swaggering with
an arrogance Ragnar never showed, Garth was a cadet on his first mission, intent upon making Shann
realize the unbridgeable gulf between a labor hand and an officer-to-be. He had appeared to know right
from their first meeting just how to make Shann’s life a misery.
Now, in this slit of valley wall away from the domes, Shann’s fists balled. He pounded them against the
earth in a way he had so often hoped to plant them on Garth’s smoothly handsome face, his well-muscled
body. One didn’t survive the Dumps of Tyr without learning how to use fists, and boots, and a list of tricks
they didn’t teach in any academy. He had always been sure that he could take Garth if they mixed it up.
But if he had loosed the tight rein he had kept on his temper and offered that challenge, he would have lost
his chance with Survey. Garth had proved himself able to talk his way out of any scrape, even minor
derelictions of duty, and he far outranked Shann. The laborer from Tyr had had to swallow all that the
other could dish out and hope that on his next assignment he would not be a member of young Thorvald’s
team. Though, because of Garth Thorvald, Shann’s toll of black record marks had mounted dangerously
high and each day the chance for any more duty tours had grown dimmer.
Shann laughed, and the sound was ugly. That was one thing he didn’t have to worry about any longer.
There would be no other assignments for him, the Throgs had seen to that. And Garth . . . well, there would
never be a showdown between them now. He stood up. The Throg ship had disappeared; they could push
on.
He found a break in the cliff wall which was climbable, and he coaxed the wolverines after him. When
they stood on the heights from which the falls tumbled, Taggi and Togi rubbed against him, cried for his
attention. They, too, appeared to need the reassurance they got from contact with him, for they were also
fugitives on this alien world, the only representatives of their kind.
Since he did not have any definite goal in view, Shann continued to be guided by the stream, following its
wanderings across a plateau. The sun was warm, so he carried his jacket slung across one shoulder. Taggi
and Togi ranged ahead, twice catching skitterers, which they devoured eagerly. A shadow on a sun-baked
rock sent the Terran skidding for cover until he saw that it was cast by one of the questing falcons from the
upper peaks. But that shook his confidence, so he again sought cover, ashamed at his own carelessness.
In the late afternoon he reached the far end of the plateau, faced a climb to peaks which still bore cones of
snow, now tinted a soft peach by the sun. Shann studied that possible path and distrusted his own powers
to take it without proper equipment or supplies. He must turn either north or south, though he would then
have to abandon a sure water supply in the stream. Tonight he would camp where he was. He had not
realized how tired he was until he found a likely half-cave in the mountain wall and crawled in. There was
too much danger in fire here; he would have to do without that basic comfort of his kind.
Luckily, the wolverines squeezed in beside him to fill the hole. With their warm furred bodies sandwiching
him, Shann dozed, awoke, and dozed again, listening to night sounds—the screams, cries, hunting calls, of
the Warlock wilds. Now and again one of the wolverines whined and moved uneasily.
Fingers of sun picked at Shann through a shaft among the rocks, striking his eyes. He moved, blinked
blearily awake, unable for the first few seconds to understand why the smooth plasta wall of his bunk had
become rough red stone. Then he remembered. He was alone and he threw himself frantically out of the
cave, afraid the wolverines had wandered off. Only both animals were busy clawing under a boulder with a
steady persistence which argued there was a purpose behind that effort.
A sharp sting on the back of one hand made that purpose only too clear to Shann, and he retreated
hurriedly from the vicinity of the excavation. They had found an earth-wasp’s burrow and were hunting
grubs, naturally arousing the rightful inhabitants to bitter resentment.
Shann faced the problem of his own breakfast. He had had the immunity shots given to all members of the
team, and he had eaten game brought in by exploring parties and labeled “safe.” But how long he could
keep to the varieties of native food he knew was uncertain. Sooner or later he must experiment for himself.
Already he drank the stream water without the aid of purifiers, and so far there had been no ill results from
that necessary recklessness. Now the stream suggested fish. But instead he chanced upon another water
inhabitant which had crawled up on land for some obscure purpose of its own. It was a sluggish scaled
thing, an easy victim to his club, with thin, weak legs it could project at will from a finned and armor-
plated body.
Shann offered the head and guts to Togi, who had abandoned the wasp nest. She sniffed in careful
investigation and then gulped. Shann built a small fire and seared the firm greenish flesh. The taste was
flat, lacking salt, but the food eased his emptiness. Heartened, he started south, hoping to find water
sometime during the morning.
By noon he had his optimism justified with the discovery of a spring, and the wolverines had brought down
a slender-legged animal whose coat was close in shade to the dusky purple of the vegetation. Smaller than
a Terran deer, its head bore, not horns, but a ridge of stiffened hair rising in a point some twelve inches
above the skull dome. Shann haggled off some ragged steaks while the wolverines feasted in earnest,
carefully burying the head afterward.
It was when Shann knelt by the spring pool to wash that he caught the clamor of the clak-claks. He had
seen or heard nothing of the flyers since he had left the lake valley. But from the noise now rising in an
earsplitting volume, he thought there was a sizable colony near-by and that the inhabitants were thoroughly
aroused.
He crept on his hands and knees to near-by brush cover, heading toward the source of that outburst. If the
claks were announcing a Throg scouting party, he wanted to know it.
Lying flat, with branches forming a screen over him, the Terran gazed out on a stretch of grassland which
sloped at a fairly steep angle to the south and which must lead to a portion of countryside well below the
level he was now traversing.
The clak-claks were skimming back and forth, shrieking their staccato war cries. Following the erratic
dashes of their flight formation, Shann decided that whatever they railed against was on the lower level,
out of his sight from that point. Should he simply withdraw, since the disturbance was not near him?
Prudence dictated that; yet still he hesitated.
He had no desire to travel north, or to try and scale the mountains. No, south was his best path, and he
should be very sure that route was closed before he retreated.
Since any additional fuss the clak-claks might make on sighting him would be undistinguished in their now
general clamor, the Terran crawled on to where tall grass provided a screen at the top of the slope. There he
stopped short, his hands digging into the earth in sudden braking action.
Below, the ground steamed from a rocket flare-back, grasses burned away from the fins of a small
scoutship. But even as Shann rose to one knee, his shout of welcome choked in his throat. One of those
fins sank, canting the ship crookedly, preventing any new take-off. And over the crown of a low hill to the
west swung the ominous black plate of a Throg flyer.
The Throg ship came up in a burst of speed, and Shann waited tensely for some countermove from the
scout. Those small speedy Terran ships were prudently provided with weapons triply deadly in proportion
to their size. He was sure that the Terran ship could hold its own against the Throg, even eliminate the
enemy. But there was no fire from the slanting pencil of the scout. The Throg circled warily, obviously
expecting a trap. Twice it darted back in the direction from which it had come. As it returned from its
second retreat, another of its kind showed, a black coin dot against the amber of the sky.
Shann felt sick inside. Now the Terran scout had lost any advantage and perhaps all hope. The Throgs
could box the other in, cut the downed ship to pieces with their energy beams. He wanted to crawl away
and not witness this last disaster for his kind. But some stubborn core of will kept him where he was.
The Throgs began to circle while beneath them the flock of clak-claks screamed and dived at the slanting
nose of the Terran ship. Then that same slashing energy he had watched quarter the camp snapped from the
far plate across the stricken scout. The man who had piloted her, if not dead already (which might account
for the lack of defense), must have fallen victim to that. But the Throg was going to make very sure. The
second flyer halted, remaining poised long enough to unleash a second bolt—dazzling any watching eyes
and broadcasting a vibration to make Shann’s skin crawl when the last faint ripple reached his lookout
post.
What happened then caught the overconfident Throg by surprise. Shann cried out, burying his face on his
arm, as pinwheels of scarlet light blotted out normal sight. There was an explosion, a deafening blast. He
cowered, blind, unable to hear. Then, rubbing at his eyes, he tried to see what had happened.
Through watery blurs he made out the Throg ship, not swinging now in serene indifference to Warlock’s
gravity, but whirling end over end across the sky as might a leaf tossed in a gust of wind. Its rim caught
against a rust-red cliff, it rebounded and crumpled. Then it came down, smashing perhaps half a mile away
from the smoking crater in which lay the mangled wreckage of the Terran ship. The disabled scout pilot
must have played a last desperate game, making his ship bait for a trap.
The Terran had taken one Throg with him. Shann rubbed again at his eyes, just barely able to catch a
glimpse of the second ship flashing away westward. Perhaps it was only his impaired sight, but it appeared
摘要:

WARLOCKTrilogybyANDRENORTONTableofContentsSTORMOVERWARLOCK*1:DISASTER*2:DEATHOFASHIP*3:TOCLOSERANKS*4:SORTIE*5:PURSUIT*6:THEHOUND*7:UNWELCOMEGUIDE*8:UTGARD*9:ONEALONE*10:ATRAPFORATRAPPER*11:THEWITCH*12:THEVEILOFILLUSION*13:HEWHODREAMS...*14:ESCAPE*15:DRAGONSLAYER*16:THIRDPRISONER*17:THROGJUSTICE*18:...

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