doing, anyway? He simply allowed Martine to have her way about things, and he knew there was nothing he could do to change that.

With a sigh, he turned to the bow and looked at those monstrous faces, now leering down at them as the boals glided into the shadow of the bluff.

'Wake up, you miserable dolt!' Gultec kicked the cleric none too gently.

Mixtal squinted and groaned, barely seeing the snarling jaguar face leering into his own. 'What… what happened?… Where's the girl?'

'Gone. Her fighting prowess apparently overwhelmed you.'

'How did — 'Mixtal suddenly sat up, ignoring the stabbing pain in his skull. 'The signs from Zaltec! Where are they?'

'Not signs from Zaltec, idiot.' Gultec gestured to the east as Mixtal realized that he had been carried to the base of the pyramid. 'They are men, warriors, even now gathering on our shore in great numbers.'

Mixtal blinked and stared. Cold terror vied with incoherent awe in his breast. He feared the retribution of the Ancient Ones, for he had let the girl escape. At the same time, he now witnessed a miracle, or thought he did.

'What makes you so sure they're warriors?' he demanded. 'They look like messengers from the gods to me!'

Gultec cast a contemptuous look at the cleric. 'They sent their scouts ashore first. These investigated the forest around the beach. Now see how their numbers unfold on the sand, and they gather in organized companies.'

'But they have no feathers! No clubs! And look, some of them are silver!'

Gultec growled inaudibly at the vista far below. 'It troubles me, this silver. I do not see why a warrior would burden himself with such a weight. It makes me suspect they are very strong.'

The Jaguar Knight turned to the priest. 'Stay here and watch them, but do not let yourselves be seen. I will speed to Ulatos and warn the counselor.'

Mixtal nodded dumbly as Gultec turned and trotted toward the edge of the forest on the inland side of the pyramid. In seconds, the Jaguar Knight passed from sight among the tangled branches. He placed his hands upon a horizontal trunk, vaulting easily over it to land on four soft paws. His spotted hide blended with the jungle as he sprang forward with feline grace and speed.

Soon Gultec took to the trees. He leaped from branch to branch across dizzying gaps, sinking his claws into hardwood at each sturdy bough.

Quickly the jaguar retraced the trail that had taken the human party two hours to traverse, then shifted back to his human body before emerging from the jungle. Even as he stepped onto the trail among the mayz fields, he saw that word of the strange visitors must have preceded him: No one worked in the fields, but ahead the streets of Ulatos bustled with uncharacteristic activity.

Gultec maintained a steady trot into the city. The throng naturally parted for the Jaguar Knight, and in moments he had reached Ulatos Plaza.

'Gultec, come here!' The voice called from the small pyramid in the center of the plaza, and the knight saw Caxal, the Revered Counselor of Ulatos, frantically gesturing to him. Gultec quickly climbed the twelve steps to the top of the platform, seeing that several other Jaguar and Eagle Knights, as well as the cleric Kachin, were standing there with Caxal.

'We have been invaded!' raged the counselor.

Gultec nodded. 'I have seen them myself — strange men traveling in great canoes. They gather on the shore below Twin Visages. They are mysterious, but their numbers are small.'

'We do not know that this is an invasion!' insisted a third voice, and Gultec turned to regard Kachin, cleric of Qotal. 'We must try to speak with them, to see who they are and what they want.'

Caxal looked from Kachin back to Gultec. 'How many troops can we gather today?' The Revered Counselor tended to be suspicious of his warriors, but now he was frightened, and his fear took priority.

'Perhaps two hundred Jaguars, as many Eagles.' The Jaguar Knight looked to Lok, Gultec's counterpart as chief of the Eagle Knights.

'Perhaps… certainly more than a hundred,' Lok said thoughtfully. Though the two warriors were not friends, each respected the other as a man of bravery, skill, and judgment.

'We can have ten thousand spearmen gathered by evening, perhaps twice that many by tomorrow,' concluded the Jaguar Knight.

'Gather them,' said Caxal with finally. 'Bring the troops to the top of the bluff, near the Twin Visages. But do not attack! We must learn more about them!' The group broke up, but Kachin stepped to Gultec's side before the knight could leave the platform.

'The girl, Erixitl,' hissed Kachin, his eyes blazing with a vengeful fire that Gultec found strangely disquieting. 'I have learned that you took her, you or your lackeys. Her death will not go unpunished!'

The knight, a man of steely courage, a veteran battle commander, squirmed under the cleric's steady gaze.

'I don't know what you mean,' Gultec mumbled, hurrying down the stairs, cursing all clerics and their gods.

Chitikas emerged from the concealing verdure, and Erix stood numb with astonishment. She saw first that the serpent's skin was not covered with scales, but instead with the brilliant, silky type of down found upon the breast of a parrot. The macaw that had first spoken to Erix stood motionless, watching as the snake undulated forward.

Her astonishment grew as a pair of huge wings, brilliantly plumed in red, gold, green, and blue, broke free from the leafy bower, fluttering very slowly. They emerged from the serpent's midsection, extending a man's height to each side. The snake assumed a weightless quality as more and more of its enormous length appeared, for no portion of its visible body rested upon the ground.

The serpentine shape drifted into aimless coils, slowly writhing in the air, while the wings continued their slow cadence. Its brilliant yellow eyes bored into Erix, yet she felt no menace in the gaze. Hesitantly, needing to relieve her numbed muscles, she sat on a rotten log.

'You have troubles,' whispered the creature. 'Perhaps I can help you.'

'Sure, help!' The macaw squawked its approval of the plan, fluttering down to rest on the snake's head.

Erix finally began to relax. Somehow she felt comfortable in the presence of this strange creature. The droning of insects and the heavy warmth of the afternoon air seemed to soothe her. She sighed. The snake's eyes bored into her, seeming to whirl in opposite directions. Its body moved with liquid ease in a slow dance.

'I come from Nexala,' she said dreamily. 'Very far from here.' And before she could continue, she was asleep.

Mixtal groaned again in soul-wrenching agony. The Ancient Ones would slay him, he knew, but not until an eternity of torment had been inflicted upon his miserable person. He barely noticed the twenty apprentices standing in an awkward circle around him, but gradually he sensed that they awaited his instructions, his leadership.

Several of the youths kept watch over the strange visitors, who as yet had made no effort to climb the bluff. Nevertheless, Mixtal was certain that, after making the journey from wherever they called home, these strangers were not about to limit their explorations to a stretch of wooded shoreline.

It quickly became clear to the cleric that the priests' present location at the base of the pyramid would be one of the first sites investigated by the newcomers when they moved off the beach.

'The girl!' he finally said. 'Did anyone see which way she went?'

The priests looked at the ground. Their spikes of stiff hair shook slowly, like a band of porcupines performing a mournful dance.

'Inland,' offered one apprentice, a strapping young man named Atax. Mixtal remembered him as one who had wielded the sacrificial knife with exceptional acumen on his initial attempts. Like any apprentice, Atax had

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