She blinked, brought her hand up to her mouth, and wiped it back and forth across her chin. There was a small red trickle growing between her fingers, dripping down her arm.

'Gordon?' She repeated it as if she had never heard the name before.

'Yes, did they kill Gordon?'

In his grasp she was swaying back and forth. Then, realizing he was shaking her, Ross got himself under control.

But a measure of understanding had come into her eyes. 'No, not Gordon. Where is Gordon?'

'You haven't seen him?' Ross persisted, knowing it was useless.

'Not since we were at the gate.' Her words were less slurred. 'Weren't you with him?'

'No. I was alone.'

'Ross, where are we?'

'Better say—when are we,' he replied. 'We're through the gate and back in time. And we have to find Gordon!' He did not want to think of what might have happened out on the shore. 

5

Time Wrecked

'Can we go back?' Karara was herself again, her voice crisp.

'I don't know.' Ross gave her the truth. The force which had drawn them through the gate was beyond his experience. As far as he knew, there had never been such an involuntary passage by time gate, and what their trip might mean he did not know.

The main concern was that Ashe must have come through, too, and that he was missing. Just let the storm abate, and, with the dolphins' aid, Ross's chance for finding the missing agent was immeasurably better. He said so now, and Karara nodded.

'Do you suppose there is a war going on here?' She hugged her arms across her breast, her shoulders heaving in the torch light with shudders she could not control. The damp chill was biting, and Ross realized that was also danger.

'Could be.' He got to his feet, switched the light from the girl to the walls. That seaweed, could it make them some form of protective covering?

'Hold this—aim it there!' He thrust the torch into her hands and went for one of the loops of kelp.

Ross reeled in lines of the stuff. It was rank-smelling but only slightly damp, and he piled it on the ledge in a kind of nest. At least in the hollow of that mound they would be sheltered after a fashion.

Karara crawled into the center of the mass, and Ross followed her. The smell of the stuff filled his nose, was almost like a visible cloud, but he had been right, the girl stopped shivering, and he felt a measure of warmth in his own shaking body. Ross snapped off the torch, and they lay together in the dark, the half-rotten pile of weed holding them.

He must have slept, Ross guessed, when he stirred, raising his head. His body was stiff, aching, as he braced himself up on his hands and peered over the edge of their kelp nest. There was light in the cave, a pale grayish wash which grew stronger toward the slit opening. It must be day. And that meant they could move.

Ross groped in the weed, his hand falling on a curve of shoulder.

'Wake up!' His voice was hoarse and held the snap of an order.

There was a startled gasp in answer, and the mound beside him heaved as the girl stirred.

'Day out—' Ross pointed.

'And the storm—' she stood up, 'I think it is over.'

It was true that the level of water within the cave had fallen, that wavelets no longer lapped with the same vigor. Morning ... the storm over ... and somewhere Ashe!

Ross was about to snap his mask into place when Karara caught at his arm.

'Be careful! Remember what I saw—last night they were killing swimmers!'

He shook her off impatiently. 'I'm no fool! And with the packs on we do not have to surface. Listen—' he had another thought, one which would provide an excellent excuse for keeping her safely out of his company, reducing his responsibility for her, 'you take the dolphins and try to find the gate. We'll want out as soon as I locate Ashe.'

'And if you do not find him soon?'

Ross hesitated. She had not said the rest. What if he could not find Gordon at all? But he would—he had to!

'I'll be back here'—he checked his watch, no longer an accurate timekeeper, for Hawaikan days held an hour more than the Terran twenty-four, but the settlers kept the off-world measurement to check on work periods—'in, say, two hours. You should know by then about the gate, and I'll have some idea of the situation along the shore. But listen—' Ross caught her shoulders in a taut grip, pulled her around to face him, his eyes hot and almost angry as they held hers, 'don't let yourself be seen—' He repeated the cardinal rule of Agents in new territory. 'We don't dare risk discovery.'

Karara nodded and he could see that she understood, was aware of the importance of that warning. 'Do you want Tino-rau or Taua?'

'No, I'm going to search along the shore first. Ashe would have tried for that last night ... was probably driven in the way we were. He'd go to ground somewhere. And I have this—' Ross touched the sonic on his belt. 'I'll set it on his call; you do the same with yours. Then if we get within distance, he'll pick us up. Back here in two hours—'

'Yes.' Karara kicked free of the weed, was already wading down to where the dolphins circled in the cave pool waiting for her. Ross followed, and the four swam for the open sea.

It could not be much after dawn, Ross thought, as he clung by one hand to a rock and watched Karara and the dolphins on their way. Then he paddled along the shore northward for his own survey of the coast. There was a rose cast in the sky, warming the silver along the far reaches of the horizon. And about him bobbed storm flotsam, so that he had to pick a careful way through floating debris.

On the reef one of the wrecked ships had vanished entirely. Perhaps it had been battered to death by the waves, ground to splinters against the rocks. The other still held, its prow well out of the now receding waves, jagged holes in its sides through which spurts of water cascaded now and then.

The wreck which had been driven landward was composed of planks, boxes, and containers rolled by the waves' force. Much of this was already free of the sea, and on the beach figures moved examining it. In spite of the danger of chance discovery, Ross edged along rocks, seeking a vantage point from which he could watch that activity.

He was flat against a sea-girt boulder, a swell of floating weed draped about him, when the nearest of the foraging parties moved into good view.

Men ... at least they had the outward appearance of men much like himself, though their skin was dark and their limbs appeared disproportionately long and thin. There were two groups of them, four wearing only a scanty loincloth, busy turning over and hunting through the debris under the direction of the other two.

The workers had thick growths of hair which not only covered their heads, but down their spines and the outer sides of their thin arms and legs to elbow and knee. The hair was a pallid yellow-white in vivid contrast to their dark skins, and their chins protruded sharply, allowing the lower line of their faces to take on a vaguely disturbing likeness to an animal's muzzle.

Their overseers were more fully clothed, wearing not only helmets on their heads, whose helms had a protective visor over the face, but also breast- and back-plates molded to their bodies. Ross thought that these could not be solid metal since they adapted to the movements of the wearers.

Feet and legs were covered with casing combinations of shoe and leggings, colored dull red. They were armed with swords of an odd pattern; their points curved up so that the blade resembled a fishhook. Unsheathed, the blades were clipped to a waist belt by catches which glittered in the weak morning light as if gem set.

Ross could see little of their faces, for the beak visors overhung their features. But their skins were as dusky as those of the laborers, and their arms and legs of the same unusual length ... men of the same race, he

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