just yet. “This has been rough, but I think we can relax…” The viewscreens were a dark blur, which indicated the
“North of the Chaladoor — !” Vezzarn and Hulik chorused hoarsely.
“ — around two hours from Emris.” The captain slid into the control chair, flicked the screen settings to normal space-view. Stars appeared near and far. He turned up the detectors, got an immediate splattering of ship blips from medium to extreme range — a civilized area! “Vezzarn, pick me up some beacons here! I want a location check fastest!”
The spacer hurried towards the communicators, Hulik following. The captain cut in the main drive engines. They responded with a long, smooth roar and the
“Worm World?” Goth’s urgent whisper demanded. The Leewit was pressed next to her against the chair, both staring intently at him.
“Went
They gasped. “You
“Emris beacons all around, skipper!” Vezzarn announced, voice quavvering with what might have been excitement or relief. “Have your location in a moment—”
The captain glanced at the witches. “Got a number we can call on Emris, to get in contact?” he asked quietly.
They nodded. “Sure do!” said Goth.
“We should be in range. Give it a try as soon as we have our course…”
It seemed almost odd, a couple of minutes later, to be speaking to Toll by a method as unwitchy as ship-to- planet communicator contact. Hulik and Vezzarn had retired to the passenger section again when the captain told them there’d be Karres business coming up. The talk was brief. Toll had sheewashed to Emris from the Dead Suns Cluster just before their call came in, because someone she referred to as a probability calculator had decided the
The captain explained as well as he could. Toll’s eyes were shining much as the Leewit’s as she blew him a kiss. “Now listen,” she said, “all three of you. There’s been more klatha simmering around the
“I just thought,” the captain said to Goth and the Leewit as he switched off the communicator, “we’d better go make sure Olimy’s all right! Come on… I’d like to hear about that Emris business then.”
Olimy, unsurprisingly, was still in his stateroom, aloof and unaffected by the events which had thundered about him. On the way back they stopped to tell Hulik and Vezzarn they’d be making landfall on Emris in a couple of hours, and to find out what the experience of the two had been when they found themselves alone on the
“If you’ll excuse me for saying so, skipper,” said Vezzarn, “I wasn’t so sure you three hadn’t just gone off and left us for good! Miss do Eldel, she said, ‘No, they’ll be back.’ But I wasn’t so sure.” He shook his grizzled head. “That part was bad!”
The captain explained there’d been no chance to warn them — didn’t add there’d been a rather good chance, in fact, that no one ever would come back to the
“Then the strongbox went!” reported Hulik. “I was looking at it, wondering what you had inside — and there was a puff of darkness about it, and that cleared, and the box was gone. Vezzarn hadn’t seen it and didn’t notice it, and I didn’t tell him.”
“If she’d told me, I’d’ve fainted dead!” Vezzarn muttered earnestly.
Then the blackness had come… Blackness about the ship and inside it and around them, lasting for perhaps a minute. When it cleared away suddenly, Goth and the Leewit were standing in the control room with them. Everyone had started looking around for the captain then until Goth suddenly announced his arrival from the control room a couple of minutes later…
“Well, I’m sorry you were put through all that,” the captain told the two. “It couldn’t be helped. But you’ll be safe down on Emris within another two hours… Happen to remember just when it was you heard that strange noise?”
The do Eldel checked her timepiece. “It seems like several lifetimes,” she said. “But as a matter of fact, it was an hour and fifteen minutes ago.”
Which, the captain calculated on the way back to the control section, left about forty minutes as the period within which Moander had been buried under his mighty citadel, the Worm World pitched into chaos, and a giant- vatch taught an overdue and lasting lesson in manners. A rather good job, he couldn’t help feeling, for that short a time!
The escort ships which hailed them something less than an hour later were patrol boats of the Emris navy. The purpose of the escort evidently was to whisk the
The captain wasn’t surprised. From what Goth and the Leewit had told him, the Karres witches were on excellent terms with the authorities of this world; and the governor of Green Galaine was an old friend of their parents. The patrol boats guided them in at a fast clip until they began to hit atmosphere, then braked. A great city, rolling up and down wooded hills, rose below; and he leveled the
“Know this place?” he asked the Leewit, nodding at the semicircle of beautiful buildings.
“Governor’s palace,” she said. “Where we’ll stay…”
“Oh?” The captain studied the palace again. “Guess he’s got room enough for guests, at that!” he remarked.
“Sure — lots!” said the Leewit.
“The tests,” Threbus said, “show about what we expected. Of course, as I told you, these results reflect only your present extent of klatha control. They don’t indicate in any way what you may be doing six months or a year from now.”
“Yes, I understand that,” the captain said.
“Let me look this over once more, Pausert, to make sure I haven’t missed anything. Then I’ll sum it up for you.”
Threbus began to busy himself again with the notes he’d made on the klatha checks he’d been running the