<h2><SPAN name="VIII" id="VIII"></SPAN>VIII</h2>
<p>Vaguely aware that the clamor at the other end of the
camp had died away, Dane muted the sound of his drum.
Over its round top he could watch the Khatkan outlaws;
their heads bobbed and swayed in time to the beat of his
fingers. He, too, could feel the pull of Tau's voice. But what
would come in answer? That shadowy thing which had been
loosed to drive them here? Or the man himself?</p>
<p>To Dane, the ruddy light of the fire dimmed, yet there was
no actual dying of those flames which coiled and thrust
around the wood. And the acrid scent of burning was thick.
How much of what followed was real, how much the product
of his tense nerves, Dane was never afterwards able to
tell. In fact, whether all the witnesses there saw the same
sights could be questioned. Did each man, Khatkan and off-worlder,
see only what his particular set of emotions and
memories dictated?</p>
<p>Something swept in from the east, something which was
not as tangible as the creature born of swamp mist. Rather it
came as an unseen menace to the fire, and all that fire signifies
to human kind—security, comradeship, a weapon against
the age-old forces of the dangerous night. Was that threat,
too, only in their minds? Or had Lumbrilo some power to so
shape his hatred?</p>
<p>The unseen was cold; it sapped a man's strength, bit at his
brain, weighted his hands and feet, weakened him. It strove
to soften him into clay another could remold. <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Nohingness'.">Nothingness</ins>,
darkness, all that was opposed to life and warmth and reality,
arose in the night, gathered together against them.</p>
<p>Yet still Tau fronted that invisible wave, his head high.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN></span>And between his sturdily planted feet the knife gleamed
bright with a radiance of its own.</p>
<p>"Ahhh—" Tau's voice curled out, to pierce that creeping
menace. Then he was singing again, the cadence of his
unknown words rising a little above the pattern wrought by
the drum.</p>
<p>Dane forced his heavy hands to continue the beat, his
wrists to rise and fall in defiance of that which crept to eat
their strength and make them less then men.</p>
<p>"Lumbrilo! I, Tau, of another star, another sky, another
world, bid you come forth and range your power against
mine!" Now there was a sharper note in that demand, the
snap of an order.</p>
<p>He was answered by another wave of the black negation—stronger,
rolling up to smash them down, as a wave in the
heavy surf of a wild ocean pounds its force against the beach.
This time Dane thought he could see that dark mass. He tore
his eyes away before it took on substance, concentrating on
the movements of his hands against the drum head, refusing
to believe that hammer of power was rising to flatten them
all. He had heard Tau describe such things in the past. But
told in familiar quarters on board the <i>Queen</i>, such experiences
were only stories. Here was danger unleashed. Yet the
medic stood unbowed as the wave broke upon him in full.</p>
<p>And, advancing under the crest of that lick of destruction,
came its controller. This was no ghost drawn from the materials
of the swamp; this was a man, walking quietly, his hands
as empty as Tau's, yet grasping weapons none of them could
see.</p>
<p>In the firelight, as the wave receded sullenly, men moaned,
lay face down upon the ground, beat their hands feebly
against the earth. But, as Lumbrilo came on from the shadows,
one of them got to his hands and knees, moving with
small tortured jerks. He crawled toward Tau, his head lolling
on his shoulders as the head of the dead rock ape had done.
Dane patted the drum with one hand while, with the other,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN></span>he groped for his fire ray. He tried to shout in warning and
found that he could not utter a sound.</p>
<p>Tau's arm moved, raised from his side, made a circling
motion.</p>
<p>The creeping man, his eyes rolled up in his head until only
the whites gleamed blindly in the limited light, followed that
gesture. He drew level with the medic, passed beyond toward
Lumbrilo, whining as a hound prevented from obeying his
master might lament.</p>
<p>"So be it, Lumbrilo," Tau said. "This is between you and
me. Or do you not dare to risk your power against mine? Is
Lumbrilo so weak a one that he must send another to do his
will?"</p>
<p>Raising both hands again the medic brought them down,
curling inward, until he stooped and touched them to the
ground. When he straightened once again the knife was in
his grasp and he tossed it behind him.</p>
<p>The smoke from the fire swirled out in a long tongue,
coiled about Lumbrilo and was gone. A black and white beast
stood where the man had been, its tufted tail lashing, its
muzzle a mask of snarling hate and blood lust.</p>
<p>But Tau met that transformation with laughter which was
like the lash of a whip.</p>
<p>"We both be men, you and I, Lumbrilo. Meet me as a
man and keep those trickeries for those who have not the
clear sight. A child plays as a child, so—" Tau's voice came in
a rumble, but Tau was gone. The huge, hairy thing which
swayed in his place turned a gorilla's beast visage to his
enemy. For a breathless moment Terran ape confronted
Khatkan lion. Then the spaceman was himself again. "The
time for games is over, man of Khatka. You have tried to hunt
us to our deaths, have you not? Therefore death shall be the
portion of the loser now."</p>
<p>Lion vanished, man stood watching, alertly, as swordsman
might face swordsman with a blood feud lying on their blades.
To Dane's eyes the Khatkan made no move. Yet the fire
leaped high, as if freshly fed, and flames burst from the wood,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span>flew into the air, red and perilous birds, darting at Tau until
they outlined him from the ground under his boots to an
arch over his head. They united and spun faster until Dane,
watching with dazzled eyes, saw the wheel become a blur of
light, hiding Tau within its fiery core. His own wrists ached
with the strain of his drumming as he lifted one hand and
tried to shield his sight from the glare of that pillar of fire.</p>
<p>Lumbrilo was chanting—a heavy <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'blatt'.">blast</ins> of words. Dane
stiffened; his traitorous hands were falling into the rhythm
of that other song! Straightaway he raised both from the
drum head, brought them down in a discordinate series of
thumps which bore no relation to either the song Tau wanted
or that which Lumbrilo was now crooning. <i>Thump—thump—thump</i>—Dane
beat it out frantically, belaboring the drum
head as he wanted to sink his fists home on the body of the
Khatkan witch doctor.</p>
<p>The pillar of fire swayed, fluttered as if a wind drove it—and
was gone. Tau, unmarked, smiled.</p>
<p>"Fire!" He pointed his fingers at Lumbrilo. "Would you
try earth, and water, and air also, wizard? Call hither your
whirlwind, up your flood, summon the land to quake. None
of those shall bring me down!"</p>
<p>Shapes came flooding out of the night, some monstrous,
some human, streaming past Lumbrilo to crowd into the circle
of firelight. Some Dane thought he knew, some were
strangers. Men wearing space uniforms, or the dress of other
worlds, women—they strode, wept, mingled with the monsters
to laugh, curse, threaten.</p>
<p>Dane guessed that Lumbrilo sent now against the Terran
the harvest of the medic's own memories. He shut his eyes
against this enforced intrusion upon another's past, but not
before he saw Tau's face, strained, fined to the well-shaped
bones beneath the thin flesh, holding still a twisted smile as
he met each memory, accepted the pain it held for him, and
set it aside unshaken.</p>
<p>"This, too, has no power any longer, man who walks in
the dark."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Dane opened his eyes. Those crowding wraiths were fading,
losing substance. Lumbrilo crouched, his lips drawn back
from his teeth, his hatred plain to read.</p>
<p>"I am not clay to be molded by your hands, Lumbrilo.
And now I say that the time has come to call an end—"</p>
<p>Tau raised his hands slowly once again, holding them away
from his body, palms pointing earthward. And beneath them,
on either side of the spaceman, two black shadows gathered
on the surface of the ground.</p>
<p>"You have fettered yourself with your own bounds. As you
have been the hunter, so shall you now be the hunted."</p>
<p>Those shadows were growing as plants might issue from
the packed soil of the camping ground. When his hands were
shoulder high, Tau held them steady. Now on either side of
his tautly held body crouched one of the black-and-white
lions with which Lumbrilo had identified his own brand of
magic throughout the year.</p>
<p>Lumbrilo's "lion" had been larger than life, more intelligent,
more dangerous, subtly different from the normal animal
it counterfeited. So now were these. And both of them
raised their heads to gaze intently into the medic's face.</p>
<p>"Hunt well, brothers in fur," he said slowly, almost caressingly.
"Him whom you hunt shall grant you sport in the
going."</p>
<p>"Stop it!" A man leaped from the shadows behind the
witch doctor. Firelight made plain his off-world dress, and he
swung up a blaster, aiming at the nearest of the waiting
beasts. That flash struck true, but it neither killed nor even
singed the fine fur of the animal's pelt.</p>
<p>As the blaster's aim was swung from beast to man, Dane
fired first. His ray brought a scream from the other, who
dropped his weapon from a badly seared hand to reel back,
cursing.</p>
<p>Tau waved his hands gently. The great animal heads
turned obediently, until the red eyes were set on Lumbrilo.
Facing them, the witch doctor straightened, spat out his
hate at the medic:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I do not run to be hunted, devil man!"</p>
<p>"I think you do, Lumbrilo. For you must taste fear now as
you have made other men drink of it, so that it fills your
blood and races through your body, clouds your mind to make
of you less than a man. You have hunted out those who
doubted your power, who stood in your chosen path, whom
you wanted removed from the earth of Khatka. Do you doubt
that they wait in the last dark for you now, ready to greet
you, witch doctor? What they have known, you shall also
know. This night you have shown me all that lies in my past
that is weak, that was evil, that I may regret or find sorrow
for. So shall you also remember through the few hours left
you. Aye, you <i>shall</i> run, Lumbrilo!"</p>
<p>As he spoke, Tau approached the other, the two black-and-white
hunters pacing beside him. Now he stooped and
caught up a pinch of soil and spat upon it three times. Then
he threw the tiny clod of earth at the witch doctor. It struck
Lumbrilo just above the heart and the man reeled under
what might have been a murderous blow.</p>
<p>The Khatkan broke then, completely. With a wailing cry
he whirled and ran, crashing into the brush as one who runs
blindly and without hope. Behind him the two beasts leaped
noiselessly together and all three were gone.</p>
<p>Tau swayed, put his hand to his head. Dane kicked away
the drum, arose from his cramped position stiffly to go to
him. But the medic was not yet done. He returned to stand
over the prostrate native hunters and he clapped his hands
sharply.</p>
<p>"You are men, and you shall act as men henceforth. That
which was, is no longer. Stand free, for the dark power follows
him who misused it, and fear no longer eats from your
basins, drinks from your cups, or lies beside you on the sleep
mats."</p>
<p>"Tau!" Jellico's shout reached them over the cries of the
rousing Khatkans. But Dane was there first, catching the
medic before he slumped to the ground; but he was dragged
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span>with that dead weight until he sat with the medic's head on
his shoulder, the other's body resting heavily against him.
For one horror-filled moment Dane feared that he did indeed
hold a dead man, that one of the outlaw Hunters must have
struck a last blow for his discredited leader. Then Tau sighed
and began to breathe deeply. Dane glanced up, amazed, at
the captain.</p>
<p>"He's asleep!"</p>
<p>Jellico knelt and his hand went to test heart beat, then to
touch the medic's worn and dirty face. "Best thing for him,"
he said briskly. "He's had it."</p>
<p>It took some time to get the facts of their triumph sorted
out. Two of the off-worlder poachers were dead. The other
and the spaceman were prisoners, while Nymani rounded up
in addition the man Dane had burned to save Tau. When
the younger spaceman returned from making the medic comfortable
in the shelter, he found Asaki and Jellico holding an
impromptu court of inquiry.</p>
<p>The dazed native Hunters had been expertly looped
together by Nymani and, a little apart from them, the off-worlders
were under examination.</p>
<p>"An I-C man, eh?" Jellico, smoothing a mud-spattered
chin with a grimed hand, regarded the latest arrival measuringly.
"Trying to run in and break a Combine charter, were
you? You'd better spill the facts; your own head office will
disown you, you ought to know that. They never back any
failures in these undercover deals."</p>
<p>"I want medical attention," snapped the other, cradling
his seared hand to his chest. "Or do you plan to turn me over
to these savages?"</p>
<p>"Seeing as how you tried to blast our medic," replied the
captain with a grin which was close to shark-like, "he may
not feel much like patching up those fingers of yours. Stick
'em in where they have no business, and they're apt to get
burned. At any rate he's not going to look at 'em until he's
had a chance to rest. I'll give you first aid. And while I'm
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>working we'll talk. I-C going into the poaching trade now?
That news is going to <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'pleace'.">please</ins> Combine; they have no use for
you boys anyway."</p>
<p>His answer was lurid and uninformative. But the uniform
tunic the other wore could not be so easily explained away.
Dane, worn out, stretched his aching length on a pile of
mats and lost all interest in the argument.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Two days later they stood once more on the same terrace
where Lumbrilo had wrought his magic and met his first
defeat. This time no lightning played along the mountain
ridges and the blaze of the sun was so bright and clear that
one could hardly believe in the fantastic happenings of that
swamp clearing where men had fought with weapons not
made by hands. The three from the <i>Queen</i> moved away from
the parapet to meet the Chief Ranger as he came down the
stairs.</p>
<p>"A messenger has just arrived. The hunter was hunted
indeed, and his going was witnessed by many—though they
did not see those which hunted him. Lumbrilo is dead; he
came to his end by the Great River."</p>
<p>Jellico started. "But that is almost fifty miles from the
swamp, on this side of the mountain!"</p>
<p>"He was hunted and he fled—as you promised," Asaki said
to Tau. "You made strong magic, off-world man."</p>
<p>The medic shook his head slowly. "I but turned his own
methods against him. Because he believed in his power, that
same power, reflected back, broke him. Had I been facing
one who did not believe...." He shrugged. "Our first meeting
set the pattern. From that moment he feared a little that I
could match him, and his uncertainty pierced a hole in his
armor."</p>
<p>"Why on earth did you want 'Terra Bound?'" burst out
Dane, still seeking an explanation for that one small mystery
among the others.</p>
<p>Tau chuckled. "In the first place, that blasted tune has
haunted us all for so long that I knew its rhythm was probably
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>the one you could keep to without hardly knowing that
you were beating it out. And, in the second place, its alien
pattern was a part of our particular background, to counteract
Lumbrilo's native Khatkan music, which was certainly a
big factor in <i>his</i> stage setting. He must have believed that we
would not find out about the drugged water and so would be
prepared for any fantasy he cared to produce. When they
saw us coming out over the swamp they counted us easy
takings. His practice had always been with Khatkans, and
he judged us by their reactions to stimuli he knew well how
to use. So he failed...."</p>
<p>Asaki smiled. "Which was good for Khatka but ill for
Lumbrilo and those using him to make mischief here. The
poacher and the outlaw Hunters will meet with our justice,
which I do not believe they will relish. But the other two,
the spaceman and the company agent, are to be sent to
Xecho to face Combine authorities. It is my thought that
those will not accept kindly the meddling of another company
in their territory."</p>
<p>Jellico grunted. "Kindness and Combine are widely separated
in such matters. <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Bu'.">But</ins> we can now take passage on the
same ship as your prisoners—"</p>
<p>"But, my friend, you have not yet seen the preserve. I
assure you that <i>this</i> time there shall be no trouble. We have
several days yet before you must return to your ship—"</p>
<p>The captain of the <i>Queen</i> held up his hand. "Nothing
would give me greater pleasure than to inspect the Zoboru
preserve, sir—next year. As it is, my holiday is over and the
<i>Queen</i> is waiting for us on Xecho. Also, permit me to send
you some tapes dealing with the newest types of flitters—guaranteed
against flight failures."</p>
<p>"Yes, guaranteed," Tau added guilelessly, "not to break
down, lose course, or otherwise disrupt a pleasant excursion."</p>
<p>The Chief Ranger threw back his head and his deep-chested
laughter was echoed from the heights above them.
"Very well, Captain. Your mail run will bring you back to
Xecho at intervals. Meanwhile I shall study your sales tapes
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>concerning the non-expendable flitters. But you <i>shall</i> visit
Zoboru—and pleasantly, very pleasantly, I assure you, Medic
Tau!"</p>
<p>"I wonder," Tau muttered and Dane heard. "Just now the
quiet of deep space is a far, far more entrancing proposition!"</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />