his left eye. Out on the edge of the forest the wind tended to kick up
dust. Lowering the transparent, protective shield over his face, he
reflexively extended his antennae through the slots provided for that
purpose and moved on, striding forward on all six legs. Occasionally he
would arch his back and advance only on his four trulegs, not because
he needed the additional manipulative capacity his versatile foothands
could provide, but because it raised his body to its maximum standing
height of slightly over a meter and a half and enabled him to see over
the meter-high, lavender-tinted grass that comprised much of the
surrounding vegetation.
Something quick and chittering scuttled through the sedge close
to his right. Using the truhand and foothand on that side of his
thorax, he drew the rifle that was slung across his back and aimed it
at the source of the noise, tensing in readi-ness. The muzzle of the
weapon came up sharply as half a dozen !ccoerk burst from the meadow.
Letting out a whistle of fourth-degree relief, he let a digit slip from
the trigger and reholstered the gun.
Their plump brown bodies shot through with purple streaks, the
flock of feathered !ccoerk fluttered toward the satin-surfaced lake,
cooing like plastic batons that had been charged with static
electricity. Beneath a feathered, concave belly one trailed an egg sac
nearly as big as herself. Idly, Wor-vendapur found himself wondering if
the eggs were edible. While Willow-Wane had been settled for more than
two hundred years, development had been slow and gradual, in the
conservative, measured manner of the thranx. Coloniza-tion had also
been largely confined to the continents of the northern hemisphere. The
south was still a vast, mostly un-known wilderness, a raw if
accommodating frontier where new discoveries were constantly being made
and one never knew what small marvel might be encountered beneath the
next hill.
Hence his rifle. While Willow-Wane was no Trix, a world that
swarmed with dynamic, carnivorous life-forms, it was still home to an
intimidating assortment of energetic native predators. A settler had to
watch his steps, especially in the wild, uncivilized south.
Tall, flexible blue sylux fringed the shore of the lake, an
impressive body of fresh water that dominated the landscape for a
considerable distance to the north. Its tepid, prolific expanse
separated the rain forest, beneath which the settle-ment had been
established, from inhospitable desert that dropped southward from the
equator. Founded forty years ago, the burgeoning, thriving colony hive
of Paszex was al-ready sponsoring outlying satellite communities.
Worvendapur's family, the Ven, was prominent in one of these, the agri
town of Pasjenji.
While rain forest drip was adequate to supply the settle-ment's
present water needs, plans for future growth and ex-pansion demanded a
larger and more reliable supply. Rather than going to the trouble and
expense of building a reservoir, the obvious suggestion had been made
that the settlement tap the ample natural resource of the lake. As the
possessor of a subspecialty in hydrology, Wor had been sent out to
scout suitable treatment and pipeline sites. Ideally, he would find one
as close to the lake as possible that was also geologically stable and
capable of supporting the necessary engineering infrastructure, from
pumping station to filtration plant to feeder lines.
He had been out in the field for more than a week now, taking and
analyzing soundings, confirming aerial surveys, evaluating potential
locations for the treatment plant and transmission routes for the water
it would eventually supply. Like any thranx, he missed the conviviality