only one of us should go, for the same reason. But I’ll take a rifle.”
He slung a talkie over his shoulder. He took the sporting rifle Ketch handed him, He went to the exit-port. There he said peremptorily, “Talk, Karen!”
To Ketch and Breen he said in a low tone, “We’re in a very tight fix. I’ll try to keep you posted by talkie, but if there’s trouble, about all you can do is lift off and find somewhere else aground here where you can try to keep from being found. Don’t try to help me.”
He opened the port and jumped to the ground. All about him was jungle, though not unduly filled with underbrush. He headed through it for the sere brown area in which a globular metal object had been photographed from space.
The jungle was thick but by no means impassable. He forced his way through it. Almost immediately he began to speak into the talkie. His voice was not soprano, but it wasn’t likely that it would sound like a creature from a slug-ship. He spoke deliberately to be overheard. Those back in the Marintha heard every sound.
“ This is a pretty thick jungle ,” they heard him say. “ A few vines, not many, and very few thorns. The smells aren’t unpleasant. Some are even attractive .”
He went on. He wished to be heard moving openly toward the defoliated area. A man or any other creature intending mischief would either move silently or else with the equivalent of roarings intended to intimidate those who heard him. Coming openly, and talking, he’d be less likely to seem menacing.
“… Things are singing in the trees. I can’t spare the time to try to see them. I need to keep moving and advertising myself as not sneaking up …”
Karen tried to obey his orders to keep her voice going out on a communicator-frequency not too far removed from the signal-beam. But she was afraid, for him. Her throat clicked shut. She could not speak. She listened as he continued to advance and to talk. Presently—
“ Things are opening out ahead ,” he reported. “ No sign of anybody coming to meet me or take a pot shot. I’m nearly at the place where the foliage ends. Still plenty of tree trunks, though .”
His voice stopped.
CHAPTER THREE
There was excellent reason. He had come to a place where bare and interlacing tree trunks made filigree patterns against the sky. All foliage abruptly ceased to be. The trees seemed to thin out, but it was illusory because in the absence of leaves he could see for a long way between them. They hadn’t merely been stripped of leaves though. They were dead. They’d been killed. Their trunks looked dull and lifeless by comparison with the jungle-stuff still alive. There was no trace of anything with life in it ahead. Even the underbrush—there must be some underbrush where there are trees of varied species—even the underbrush appeared only as sticks. The ground was covered with rotted leaves. To right and left, the trees raised bare branches as if making frozen, futile gestures to the sky.
There was a clump of some local species, hundreds of slender saplings merging together thirty feet above the ground. They joined there, and other saplings rose from their junction-places and grew another thirty feet and joined again. It was like a three-story forest. It covered acres—and half of it was dead and half of it was living. The dead part was in the leafless area which from aloft formed an almost perfect circle. The living part was outside it. Howell saw dead ground-cover—creeping stuff with no upright stalks, but only runners and roots going down into the soil. In the brown circle it had been killed. Yet fresh runners already grew inward from the edge.
There was no sound before him. If wind stirred the jungle-tops, Howell did not hear it. There was the silence of death in this leafless portion of the jungle. Behind him things chattered and squeaked and made various mostly high-pitched noises. Ahead—nothing!
It didn’t feel right. It didn’t look right. Men