'Not yet,' he whispered back. Just then the crashing and
thrashing about stopped, and the whining recommenced, sounding more frustrated than before. It couldn't find Keman any more than it had been able to find Shana.
It was worth trying. The only trouble was, in order to drain something, he had to actually be in physical contact with it.
He couldn't deny that chance to his men. And it would be throwing the blessing back in their face to have them risk so much and not take the opportunity. 'Start working your way back to the mouth of the cave,' he whispered under cover of the crashes and
'But—' Lynder began.
He slid under it just in time; the noise stopped again, and the whining began.
This wasn't where he'd have gone by choice; the thing was wheeled, something like a hay-wain, but the clearance between the cave floor and the thing's bottom wasn't more than half that beneath a real wagon. He had barely enough room to hide, and he couldn't help having nightmare visions of the thing waking up and deciding to squash him by lowering itself down on top
of him. He was sweating and ice-cold at the same time, and fighting a panic that threatened to keep him from thinking at all. If anything, the view from under here was worse than the first shelter, and it seemed to take forever before he heard Keman's echoing
The construct crashed off in pursuit, and Kyrtian scrambled out from under the 'wain' to take shelter, not under, but behind yet another behemoth. This time he wanted to
It looked like a box on two legs, with a pair of blunt crab-like pincers on arms attached to either side of the box. It wasn't very fast, and it wasn't at all graceful, but it
Two lights—were they mage-lights?—at the front of the box projected the beams of light that he had seen sweeping the ground looking for them. They swiveled, looking uncannily like eyes, and the resemblance made him shiver. His tunic clung damply to his back and his hands ached where he clutched the sides of his hiding-place.
It stopped and swept the ground around it with those light-beams. So—where were the other two, and why wasn't it able to spot them?
He frowned, thinking; Keman and Shana
beams snapped across the length of the cave and focused on
He dashed out of cover long enough to get a piece of debris himself, laboring under the double handicap of not wanting to distract the thing from its current hunt, and being careful not to go where he might inadvertently cast a shadow or move across the lantern-light. Maybe it didn't have good vision—and maybe it did. This wasn't the time to find out.
He kept one eye on the cave-mouth. I
The thing fastened its light-beams on the junk while it was still in the air, and started after it.
Kyrtian glanced over at the mouth of the cave, just in time to see twin shadows slip over the ledge and into the dark hole that was the start of their road to safety.
Relief made his mouth dry. At least
That was the good news; the bad news was that the thing was moving faster, and more surely, every time it crossed the floor. Instead of running out of power, it seemed as if movement was permitting it to loosen up joints long held immobile. It was a good thing he had decided to join this little game. It looked as if it was going to need three players.
The construct reached the spot where the debris had landed—but this time it stood as if it was considering something, then slowly moved its lights along the path that the junk Keman had thrown had taken—
He dropped down out of sight, looked hastily around, and picked a place to hide. Far enough away—and near enough to
reach. He hoped.
He was already running flat-out for his hiding-place when the piece left his hand. He dove and rolled beneath the construct and lay there with his mouth clamped around his sleeve to muffle his panting as the footsteps crashed nearer and nearer....
Still, she was glad of his aid, and gladder still he'd gotten the two weakest members of the group out of danger.
Well, neither did she. But right now, that was second on her list of concerns. The first was how to keep