were at least six bodies scattered about the tiny room. The sauropithecus had taken its time here.

Lycon turned away, shaken for the first time in long years. He looked back the way he had come. None of the others had crawled through the last hedgerow yet. This time he felt thankful for their flabby uselessness.

He used a stick of kindling to scatter coals into the straw bedding, and tossed the flaming brand after. With luck no one would ever know what had happened here. As Vonones had said, there was a limit. They had better finish the lizard-ape fast.

The pack began to bay fiercely not far away. From the savage eagerness of their voices, Lycon knew they had overtaken the lizard-ape. Whatever the thing was, its string had run out, Lycon thought with relief.

Recklessly he ducked into the hedge and wormed through, not pausing to look for an opening. Thorns shredded his tunic and gouged his limbs as he pulled himself clear and began running toward the sounds.

No chance of recapturing the beast alive now. Any one of the six Molossians was nearly the size of the blue creature, and the arena would have taught the pack to kill rather than to hold. By the time Vonones' men arrived with the nets, it would be finished. Lycon half regretted that-the lizard-ape fascinated him. But quite obviously the thing was too murderously powerful to be loose and far too clever to be safely caged. It was luck the beast had kept close to its kill instead of running farther. The pack was just beyond the next hedgerow now.

With an enormous bawl of pain, one of the hounds suddenly arched into view, flailing in the air above the hedge. A terrified clamor broke through the ferocious baying of the pack. Beyond the hedge a fight was raging-and by the sound of it, the pack was in trouble.

Lycon swore and made for the far hedge, ignoring the cramp in his side. His knuckles clamped white on the boar spear.

He could see three of the dogs ahead of him, snarling and milling uncertainly on the near side of the hedge. The other three were not to be seen. They were beyond the hedge, Lycon surmised-and from their silence, dead. The lizard-ape was cunning; it had lain in wait for the pack as the dogs squirmed through the hedge. But surely it was no match for three huge Molossians.

Lycon was less than a hundred yards from the hedge when the blue-scaled lizard- ape vaulted over the thorny barrier with an acrobat's grace. It writhed through the air, and one needle-clawed hand slashed out-tearing the throat from the nearest Molossian before the dog was fully aware of its presence. The lizard-ape bounced to the earth like a cat, as the last two snarling hounds sprang for it together. Spinning and slashing as it ducked under and away, the thing was literally a blur of motion. Deadly motion. Neither hound completed its leap, as lethal talons tore and gutted-slew with nightmarish precision.

Lycon skidded to a stop on the muddy field. He did not need to glance behind him to know he was alone with the beast. Its eyes glowed in the sunset as it turned from the butchered dogs and stared at its pursuer.

Lycon advanced his spear, making no attempt to throw it. As fast as the sauropithecus moved, it would easily dodge his cast. And Lycon knew that if the beast leaped, he was dead-dead as Pentheus after his sisters rent him in their fury. His only chance was that he might drive his spear home, might take his slayer with him-and he thought the beast recognized that.

It crouched like a wrestler advancing upon a foe, its lips drawn in a savage grin-and then it vaulted back over the hedge again.

Lycon tried to make his dry mouth shape a prayer of thanks. Eyes intent on the hedge, he held his spear at ready. Then he heard feet splatting at a clumsy run behind him.

Galerius puffed toward him, accompanied by several of the archers in a straggling clot. 'That hut back there caught fire!' he blurted. 'Didn't you see it? Just a ball of flame by the time we could get to it. Don't know if anyone was there, or if they got out or…'

He caught sight of the torn bodies of the hounds, and his puffing excitement trailed off. His voice drawled in wonder: 'What happened here?'

Lycon finally let his breath out. 'Well, I found the lizard-ape we were supposed to be hunting-while you fools were back there gawking at your fire! Now I think Vonones owes you for a pack of dogs.'

* * *

Lycon waited long enough to make certain the lizard-ape no longer lay in wait beyond the hedge. After seeing the hounds, no one had wanted to be first to wriggle through to the other side. Thinking of those murderous claws, the beastcatcher had no intention of doing so either. There was a gap in the hedge some distance away, and he sent half the men to circle around. There was no sign of the beast other than three more mutilated hounds. In disgust Lycon hiked back to the caravan, letting the others follow as they would.

As he reached the road a shrill voice demanded, 'Who's there!'

Lycon swore and yelled before nervous fingers released an arrow. 'Don't loose, damn you! Fortune, that's all it would take!'

Vonones thumped heavily onto the roadbed from his perch on the wagon. His face was anxious. 'How did it go? Did you get the sauropithecus? Where are the others?'

'Dragging-ass back,' Lycon grunted wearily. 'Vonones, there isn't one of your men I'd trust to walk a dog.'

'They're wagon drivers, not hunters,' the dealer protested. 'But what about the lizard-ape?'

'We didn't get it.'

And while the others slowly drifted back, Lycon told the dealer what had happened. The damp stillness of the dusk settled around the wagons as he finished. Vonones slumped in stunned silence.

Lycon's weathered face was thoughtful. 'You got ahold of something from an arena, Vonones. I don't know whose arena or where it came from-maybe the Numidians raided it from some kingdom in the interior of Africa. But the way it moves, the way its claws are groomed-the way it kills for pleasure… Somebody lost a fighting cock, and you bought it!'

Vonones stared at him without comprehension. Licking his lips, Lycon continued. 'I can't say who could have owned it, or what sort of beast it is-but I know the arena, and I tell you that thing is a superbly trained killer. The way it ambushed the dogs, slaughtered them without a wasted motion! And that thing moves fast! I'm fast enough that I've jumped back from a pit trap I didn't know was there until my feet started to go through. I knew a gladiator in Rome who moved faster than any man I've seen. He'd let archers shoot at him from sixty yards, then dodge the arrow, and I never could believe I really saw it happen. But that thing out there in the fields is so much faster there's no comparison!'

'How did the Numidians capture it, then?' Vonones demanded.

'Capture? Maybe they took its surrender! A band of mounted archers on a thousand miles of empty plains-they could have run it down and killed it easily, and that damned thing knew it! Then they welded it into an iron cage, and strong as it is, the lizard-ape can't snap iron bars.'

'But it can pick locks,' Vonones finished his thought.

'Yes.'

The dealer took a deep breath, shrugging all over and seeming to fill his garments even more fully. 'How do we recapture it, then?'

'I don't know.'

Lycon chewed his lips, looking at the ground rather than at Vonones. 'If the lizard- ape sleeps, maybe we could sneak up and use our bows. Maybe with a thousand men we could spread out through the hedgerows and gullies, encircle it somehow.'

'We don't have a thousand men,' Vonones stated implacably.

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