us, ignoring the thrashing corpse of their fellow.
Either the creatures thought the
Stephen clicked up the wand that supported his laser's solar charger, then spread the shimmering film. He hadn't brought spare batteries with him this time.
'I'll draw them away from the hatch,' I said. I began walking out onto the ice field. I didn't trust the footing enough to run.
Stephen set his flashgun on the crates with the panel tilted toward the sun. He left it there and strode parallel to me, triggering his cutting bar briefly to spin the blades clear of ice. The predators angled toward us, one after another.
Ice powdered beneath the creatures every time they sprang. The bottoms of their feet were chitin as jagged as the throat of a broken bottle. It gave the beasts good purchase on any surface soft enough for it to bite.
A band of single-lensed eyes gleamed from a ridge curving along the top and front of each predator's headplate. Though the individual eyes didn't move, the array gave the creatures vision over three-quarters of the arc around them.
The nearest creature focused on me. Its mandibles swung a further 30° open, like a hammer rising from half to full cock. Its deliberately short hop put me exactly ten meters away for the final spring.
I threw myself forward, holding my bar vertical in front of me. The predator slammed me down, but I was inside the circuit of its mandibles instead of being pierced through both sides when the tips clashed together.
The knife-edged chitin was thicker than that of a Molt's carapace, but my bar's ceramic teeth could have sheared hardened steel. The blade screamed as I cut the left mandible away. The creature stood above me, ripping my thighs with its front pairs of walking legs.
I held my bar in both hands and cut into the predator's head. Side-hinged jawplates cracked and crumbled on the howling bar.
The creature sprang back. White fluid gushed from the wound in its head. The creature's abdomen was slender and hairy, like that of a robber fly. It twisted around under the thorax as the creature went into convulsions.
Stephen was holding the second predator's mandibles away from his chest with both hands. The beast shook him violently, trying to break his grip. Stephen had dropped his cutting bar. It lay beneath the creature's scrabbling back legs.
I rose and slashed at the base of the right mandible, again using both hands. My feet slid out from under me. I caught the target in the belly of my blade, but my long draw stroke cut into the joint at a flatter angle than I'd intended.
Weakened chitin cracked like a rifle shot. Stephen tossed the mandible away. A ribbon of pale muscle fluttered behind it.
Stephen still had to hold the remaining mandible to prevent it from impaling him. I stood and fell down again immediately. I was slipping on my own blood and fluids from the creatures I'd butchered.
The last predator poised ten meters from Stephen for the leap that would cut him in half. A laser bolt stabbed through its open jaws. The flux lit the creature's exploding head through translucent flesh and chitin.
Piet flung down the flashgun. The solar panel that had recharged it quivered like a parachute. He raised a cutting bar. 'Handweapons only!' Piet shouted as he charged the wounded predator. Twenty men carrying tools from the excavation followed him, slipping on the ice.
Stephen let the creature throw him free. It poised to leap onto him again, predator to the last. Piet sawed three of its legs apart in a single swipe. In a few seconds, all the left-side legs were broken or sheared. Men hacked with clumsy enthusiasm into the creature's thorax.
I stood up, then fell over again. Hall and Maher ran to me. Stephen crawled on all fours behind them.
'Rakoscy!' Piet shouted. 'Rakoscy, get over here!'
'Christ's blood, his legs've been through a fucking meat grinder!' Dole cried. 'Bring that fucking tarp over here! We need to get him into the fucking ship!'
'Mister Moore,' somebody said with desperate earnestness. 'Please let go of your bar. Please. I'm going to take it out of your hand.'
The last voice I heard was Stephen's, snarling in a terrible singsong, 'He'll be all
WEYSTON
Day 249
Piet lifted the cutter's bow so that we wouldn't stall even though the thruster feed was barely cracked open. The display held a 30° down angle to our axis of flight, paralleling the barren ground a thousand meters below.
'You know. .' Stephen said, one leg braced against the sidewall and his left hand gripping the central bench on which the two of us sat. 'You're going to feel really silly if you have to explain how you got yourself killed on a sandhill like this.'
'Tsk, don't call it a sandhill,' Piet said cheerfully. 'The name honors your uncle, remember. Besides, it's not a stunt, I saw something when I brought the
'And why shouldn't the officers go on a picnic?' I said. My legs were straight out, but I was trying my best not to let them take any stress. Though the shins were healing well, they hurt as if they were being boiled in oil if I moved the wrong way.
Lightbody's lips moved slowly as he watched the screen from the jump seat and separate attitude controls behind Piet's couch. I think he was murmuring a prayer. From Lightbody, that would be normal behavior rather than a comment on the way the cutter wallowed through the air. I doubt it occurred to Lightbody to worry when Piet was the pilot.
'Found him!' Piet said./'Eleven o'clock!' Stephen said, pointing./'There it is!' I said.
Metallic wreckage was strewn along hundreds of meters of sandy waste, though the ship at the end of the trail looked healthy enough. It was a cheaply-constructed freighter of the sort the Feds built in the Back Worlds to handle local trade.
'They came in on automated approach,' Piet guessed aloud. He boosted thrust and gimballed the nozzle nearly vertical. 'Hit a tooth of rock, ripped their motors out, and there they sit since. Which may be fifty years.'
The cutter dropped like an elevator whose brakes had failed. Piet made a tight one-eighty around the crash site, killing our momentum so that he didn't have to overfly for the horizontal approach normal with a single-engined cutter.
'Not very long,' Stephen said. 'Light alloys wouldn't be so bright if they'd been open to the atmosphere any length of time.'
We crossed the trail of torn metal, then blew out a doughnut of dust as we touched down within twenty meters of the freighter's side hatch.
Piet turned his head and smiled slightly. 'If I don't keep my hand in, Stephen,' he said, 'I won't be able to do it when I have to.'
'You could fly a cutter blindfolded on your deathbed, Captain,' Lightbody said. 'Begging your pardon.'
Lightbody squeezed by to undog the hatch. I could have done that job if anybody's life had depended on it, but none of us still aboard the
Weyston's air was thin and sulfurous, unpleasant without being dangerous. The system was charted but unoccupied. Federation cartographers hadn't even bothered to give the place a name, since there was nothing beyond the planet's presence to bring a vessel here.
We needed to reseal the
I stood deliberately as Lightbody swung himself onto the coaming of the dorsal hatch. 'Give you a hand, sir?' he asked, reaching toward me.
'I'm not proud,' I said. I clasped the spacer's shoulders and paused, steeling myself to flex my legs and jump.
'I've got him, Lightbody,' Stephen said. He clasped me below the rib cage and lifted me like a mannequin onto