Midden.â
Asx
H ERE IS ANOTHER MEMORY, MY RINGS. AN EVENT that followed the brief Battle of the Glade, so swiftly that war echoes still abused our battered forest canyons.
Has the wax congealed enough yet? Can you stroke-and-sense the awesome disquiet, the frightening beauty of that evening, as we watched a harsh, untwinkling glow pass overhead?
Trace
the fatty memory of that spark crossing the sky, brightening as it spiraled closer.
No one could doubt its identity.
The Rothen cruiser, returning for its harvest of bioplunder, looted from a fragile world.
Returning for those comrades it had left behind.
Instead of genetic booty, the crew will find their station smashed, their colleagues killed or taken.
Worse, their true faces are known! We castaways might testify against them in Galactic courts. Assuming we survive.
It takes no cognition genius to grasp the trouble we faced. We six fallen races of forlorn Jijo.
As an Earthling writer might put itâwe found ourselves in fetid mulch. Very ripe and very deep.
Sara
T HE JOURNEY PASSED FROM AN ANXIOUS BLUR INTO something exalting â¦Â almost transcendent.
But not at the beginning.
When they perched her suddenly atop a galloping creature straight out of mythology, Saraâs first reaction was terrified surprise. With snorting nostrils and huge tossing head, the
horse
was more daunting than Tarek Townâs stone tribute to a lost species. Its muscular torso flexed with each forward bound, shaking Saraâs teeth as it crossedthe foothills of the central Slope by the light of a pale moon.
After two sleepless days and nights, it still seemed dreamlike the way a squadron of the legendary beasts came trotting into the ruined Urunthai campsite, accompanied by armed urrish escorts. Sara and her friends had just escaped captivityâtheir former kidnappers lay either dead or bound with strips of shredded tent clothâbut she expected reenslavement at any moment. Only then, instead of fresh foes, the darkness brought forth these bewildering saviors.
Bewildering to everyone except Kurt the Exploser, who welcomed the newcomers as expected friends. While Jomah and the Stranger exclaimed wonder at seeing real-life horses, Sara barely had time to blink before she was thrust onto a saddle.
Blade volunteered to stay by the bleak fire and tend the wounded, though envy filled each forlorn spin of his blue cupola. Sara would trade places with her qheuen friend, but his chitin armor was too massive for a horse to carry. There was barely time to give Blade a wave of encouragement before the troop wheeled back the way they came, bearing her into the night.
Pounding hoofbeats soon made Saraâs skull ache.
I guess it beats captivity by Dedingerâs human chauvinists, and those fanatic Urunthai.
The coalition of zealots, volatile as an exploserâs cocktail, had joined forces to snatch the Stranger and sell him to Rothen invaders. But they underestimated the enigmatic voyager. Despite his crippling loss of speech, the starman found a way to incite urs-human suspicion into bloody riot.
Leaving us masters of our own fate, though it couldnât last.
Now here was a
different
coalition of humans and centauroid urs! A more cordial group, but just as adamant about hauling her Ifni-knew-where.
When limnous Torgen rose above the foothills, Sara got to look over the urrish warriors, whose dun flanks were daubed with more subtle war paint than the garish Urunthai. Yet their eyes held the same dark flame that drenched ursâ souls when conflict scents fumed. Canteringin skirmish formation, their slim hands cradled arbalests while long necks coiled, tensely wary. Though much smaller than horses, the urrish fighters conveyed formidable craftiness.
The human rescuers were even more striking. Six
women
who came north with nine saddled horses, as if they expected to retrieve just two or three others for a return trip.
But thereâs six of us. Kurt and
John Steinbeck, Richard Astro