and pain as he had suffered because of the captain's betrayal. We made him swear by the Three that he would never reveal our presence here to anyone or try to bring about our rescue, though he was sure he had other friends who would not betray him, humans and others who would have helped. Ondway's movements are simply watched too closely for him to retrieve us himself. Since the incident we have worked to find our own way away from here, no matter how long it takes.'
Gabriel sat there in silence, thinking that the time involved might be generations if they kept thinking this way.
'You are very welcome for the supplies you bring and the concern you show,' said Kaiste, 'but we do not think you should stay longer than the night.'
'We appreciate your concern for us,' Gabriel said, 'but-'
'No, you don't understand,' said Kaiste. 'This is not a safe place. It has never been a safe place, but now it is even less so.'
Gabriel glanced around him at the other sesheyans who sat with them. Their eyes were full of a fear less controlled than Kaiste's.
'What is it?' Gabriel asked. 'Let us help.'
Kaiste hunched up his wings.
After a few moments one of the other sesheyans said, 'The attacks started a year or so ago. It was particularly cruel, in a way, for things on this world were finally beginning to work correctly. We had enough food, the atmosphere was finally showing a little change, the heat was increasing-' 'Heat,' Kaiste added. 'That has been our main problem out this far in the system. But we had been working on it, and we were succeeding. We had enough technical expertise to begin tailoring gases that would increase the heat held in our atmosphere much more swiftly than might otherwise happen.' 'Greenhousing,' Enda said. 'Terraforming worlds do that. Heat the atmosphere up first with a lot of noble gases, that kind of thing.'
Kaiste bowed his wings in assent. 'There is much activity below the planet's crust here, and we have been using the volcanism to help us. We mine for the gases that are of most help in heating up the atmosphere. Progress has been made even more quickly than we dared to hope, since we also found light oxides that we could 'crack' for free oxygen.'
'It was always a temporary measure,' said the other seshey-an, the female who had spoken. 'There had always been two hopes for us before we were nearly betrayed. We would get away from here somehow- hire ships, or if we had to, build them- and smuggle ourselves that way to Grith. We know the difficulties,' she said, lifting one claw before Gabriel could speak, 'better than you believe, but we were willing enough to try. Otherwise-we would make this world marginally liveable and then eventually call on the Concord for aid. The people on Phorcys and Ino with whom we had been dealing said they would not interfere, but they would not help either. We would have to do it ourselves.' Gabriel thought of the plump, comfortable negotiators sitting around the table with the ambassador, sitting on this chilly little secret, and he had to immediately start disabling his own fury before it made him get up and start smashing things.
'Ships seemed impossible to come by,' said Kaiste, 'so for the time being we concentrated on making air that we could breathe, turning this world into somewhere we could stay while we made the tools to build the tools to construct the ships. We knew that sooner or later we would be noticed, but we kept very quiet and worked to keep that notice from happening for as long as possible. And life actually became settled. We had enough food for the first time, enough water, enough hope-just enough.' Kaiste shook his head. 'Then came the near-betrayal-and after that the attacks started to come. Our people go out suited, to mine the various metals available here, to tend the various thermal caves where we have been providing light for crops and from which we release the greenhousing gases. What became plain was that someone was watching our comings and goings. Small ships began to come down from space and take our people. There is no time when we are safe from them. They come in gloom or dark; it's all one to them.'
'Are these little round ships?' Gabriel asked, making the shape with his hands.
All the sesheyans around him froze. Kaiste looked at him with great suspicion, his foremost eyes narrowing.
'Some have reported such,' he answered, 'but it is very unusual to see them and live afterward. For a long time they were simply another kind of unhewoi, something that came and vanished, taking one of us with it.'
'Unhewoi?' Gabriel asked.
Enda tilted her head to one side as if shaking her head in regret. 'It is a word for the Taker,' she said, 'the Beast that waits in the shadow of the woods and snatches you away. Bad sesheyan children are threatened with the Unhewoi if they don't behave. Many species have such a figure,' Enda shivered, 'But none expect it to become real.'
'For months now we have scarcely dared to go out,' said Kaiste. 'Our situation was bad enough when the traders stopped coming. We thought perhaps the Company had somehow gotten wind of us, even though the freighter captain had not been able to complete her message to them. Our fear was great, and our privation has slowly been growing. We were depending too much, perhaps, on what the traders brought us. Then this worse danger came upon us, and though we need trade, we dare not expose others to the danger. Others have tried to come, even from Grith, but we have warned them to stop lest they too be taken. We live in a prison now, and we do not know for sure how we will ever escape.' Gabriel's heart turned over in him. It would be a long time before he forgot his own taste of prison and the possibility of living in it forever. 'There must be something we can do for you.' 'The kindest thing is to leave,' said Kaiste. 'The attacks are always worse after people from Outside are here. We are resigned to our fate. We made it ourselves; we must bear it ourselves.' He shuddered. 'Worse yet, we would not be able to bear it if they came and took you.'
That image of Enda, dead in a gel-filled suit, the blue eyes quenched, her face stretched and distorted with rage and pain, hit Gabriel again-hit him so hard that it was all he could do to keep from jumping to his feet and heading back to Sunshine.
He looked up after a moment. 'We'll go tomorrow,' Gabriel said, 'but I don't promise not to come back.' Kaiste shook his head. 'Your courage does you credit, but you only endanger us as well as yourselves. Please go with our good will. You will keep our secret from the Company, I know. But beware to whom you speak of us. They do not forget.'
No one had much heart for conversation after that. The sesheyans showed Gabriel and Enda to a screened- off cubicle where they could have some privacy until the morning. There was no problem regarding warmth-the stone wall to one side of them was hot, and a pool of hot water bubbled up in the corner of their cubicle. But Gabriel had no joy of it, though at any other time he would have stood on his head in a pool half the size and praised it all out of proportion.
'We have to do something to help them,' he said for about the twentieth time, some hours after they had been left there. Sleep would not come anywhere near him, and Enda had given up on it too since Gabriel plainly could neither lie still nor be quiet.
'I wait to hear a plan from you,' Enda said rather wearily, 'but I have yet to hear anything coherent.' 'It's hard to plan coherently when there's still the matter of those VoidCorp fighters to think about.' 'They are no longer a problem, I would have thought.'
'That's not what I mean. Where did they come from? It's not that they couldn't have had stardrive, but it's not all that usual. It would make more sense for their base carrier to be around here somewhere, yet there's been no sign of it.'
'Possibly they're afraid of attracting as much attention as such a large VoidCorp ship would produce should it appear in Thalaassa system without warning,' Enda replied, 'especially if they thought Schmetterling was going to be here to take official notice.'
'I don't believe they wouldn't be pretty well informed of the comings and goings of Concord ships,' Gabriel said. Still Enda might have a point. Or there might be some other reason entirely. He sighed and sat down. 'I just don't know,' he said. 'If I could only-'
Both their handheld comm receivers, tucked in their pockets, beeped softly. Gabriel looked at Enda, who shook her head and reached into her pocket to turn hers off.
The air whispered in Gabriel's ear that this was a mistake. He swallowed, then shook his head and took his comm out, thumbing it open for reception.
'You two still awake down there?' said Helm's voice from both their handhelds.