Derron was clinging to the sapling as the slave-unit was dragged out over the edge of the pit. “Thanks for the word, Colonel. How about those grenades I requested?”
“We’re rushing two more slave-units into your sector there, Odegard, but we’re having some technical troubles with them. Three of the enemy have been destroyed now… Grenades, you say?” There was a brief pause. “They tell me some grenades are coming up.” The colonel’s voice clicked off.
Their rescue job complete, The People had all fallen back a few steps and were watching the machine carefully. Derron braced himself on one arm and repeated his peaceful gestures with the other. This seemed to reassure his audience about the slave, but they promptly found something else to worry about—the setting sun, which they kept glancing at over their shoulders as they talked to one another. Derron needed no linguist to know that they were concerned about finding some place of relative safety in which to spend the night.
In another minute The People had gathered up their few belongings and were on the march, with the air of folk resuming a practiced activity. The man with the bow spoke several times to the slave-unit and looked disappointed when his words were not understood, but he could not dally. Stone-Man was left free to help himself as best he might.
So Derron trailed along at the end of The People’s hiking file. He soon found that on level ground he could keep the slave-unit moving along pretty well on its long arms, walking it like a broken-backed ape on the knuckles of its hands with its legs dragging. The People cast frequent backward glances at this pathetic creature, regarding it with mixed and not altogether favorable emotions. But even more frequently they looked back farther in the direction they had come from, plainly fearful that something else could be on their trail.
If The People were not expecting the berserker machine, Derron was. The slave’s leg-dragging track was certainly plain enough, and the sight of it might cause the killing machine to approach with some caution, but it would still come on.
Colonel Borss came back to take over the situation. “Odegard, our screens show the berserker’s area of disturbance moving south away from you and then coming back; evidently you were right about it being on a false trail of some kind. Your berserker is the only one we haven’t bagged yet, but it seems to be in the most vital spot. What I think we’ll do is this: the two slave-units being sent to reinforce you are going to catch up with your band, in a few minutes present-time. We’ll have them follow your band’s line of march, keeping just out of sight, one on each flank; don’t want to scare your people with a lot of metal men and have them scatter—we’ve had enough of that problem today. When your people stop somewhere for the night, you stay with ‘em, and we’ll set up the other two units in ambush.”
“Understand.” Derron kept moving, walking with his arms, the master-unit rising and falling slightly as the slave jolted over the bumpy terrain. A certain amount of feedback was necessary to give the operator the feeling of presence in the past.
The colonel’s plan sounded reasonable, as Derron thought it over. And by Derron’s interpretation of the law of averages, something should go right pretty soon.
Falling dusk washed the wilderness in a kind of dark beauty. The People were marching with the swampy, half-wooded valley on their right and the low rocky hills now immediately on their left. The man with the bow, whose name seemed to be something like Matt, kept anxiously scanning these hills as he walked at the head of the file.
“What about dropping those grenades to me now? Ho, Operations? Anybody there?”
“We’re setting up this ambush now, Odegard. We don’t want your people hurling grenades around at random in the dark.”
There was some sense to that, Derron supposed. And his slave could not throw anything efficiently while it had to walk and balance on its hands.
The leader Matt turned suddenly aside and went trotting up a barren hillside, the other people following briskly. Scrambling after them as best he could, Derron saw that they were heading for a narrow cave entrance, set into a steep low cliff like a door in the wall of a house. Everyone halted a little distance away from the hole. Before Derron had quite caught up, Matt had unslung his bow and nocked an arrow. Another man then pitched a sizable rock into the darkness of the cave, having to stretch around an L-bend at the entrance to do so. At once there reverberated out of the depths a growl, which scattered The People like the good survival experts they were.
When the cave bear came to answer the door, it discovered the slave alone, a crippled foundling on the porch.
The bear’s slap of greeting bowled the unbalanceable slave over. From a supine position Derron slapped back, bending the bear’s snout slightly and provoking a blood-freezing roar. Made of tougher stuff than poison-diggers, the bear strained its fangs on the slave-unit’s face. Still flat on his back, Derron lifted the bear with his steel arms and pitched it downhill. Go away!
The first roar had been only a tune-up for the one that followed. Derron didn’t want to break even an animal’s lifeline here if he could help it, but time was passing, and his real enemy would be drawing near. He threw the bear a little farther this time. The animal bounced once, landed on its feet and running, and kept right on going into the swamp. Howls trailed in the air behind it for half a minute.
The People emerged from behind rocks and inside crevices and gathered slowly around the slave-unit, for once forgetting to look over their shoulders along the way they had come. Derron had the feeling that in another moment they were going to fall down and worship him; before any such display could get started, he knuckle-walked the slave-unit into the cave and scanned the darkness—the slave’s eyes adjusted quickly to see in whatever wavelengths were present—to make sure it was unoccupied. It was a high narrow cavern with a second opening, small and window-like, high up on the wall toward the rear. There was plenty of room to shelter the entire band; Matt had made a good discovery.
When Derron came out of the cave, he found The People getting ready to build a good-sized fire at the mouth; they were gathering wood from under the trees at the edge of the swamp and lugging it hurriedly uphill. Far across the valley, a small spark of orange burned in the thickening purplish haze of falling night, marking the encampment of some other band.
“Operations, how are those ambush arrangements coming along?”
“The other two units are just taking up their positions. They have you in sight at the mouth of the cave.”
“Good.”
Let The People build their fire, then, and let the berserker be drawn by it. It would find the band as well protected as they would ever be.
From a pouch of some kind of tough skin, one of the old women produced a bundle of bark, which she unwrapped to reveal a smoldering center. With incantations and a judicious use of wood chips, she soon had the watchfire blazing. Its upper tongues reached high and bright against the fast-dimming sky.
The band filed into the cave, the slave-unit last to enter, right after Matt. Just inside the L-bend of the entrance, Derron sat his proxy, leaning against the wall, and relaxed his arms with a great sigh. He was ready for a rest. In spite of the servo assists, he had had a lot of exercise.
He had no sooner relaxed a notch than the night outside erupted without warning into battle. There was the crackle and slam of laser flame, the clang and squeal and crunch of armored bodies meeting. The people in the cave jumped as one person to their feet.
In the flickering reflections of laser light, Derron could see Matt with his bow ready, facing the entrance, while the other adults looked for rocks to throw. In the rear of the cave the boy Dart had scrambled up to a perch from which he could look out of the high small window. The laser light was bright on his awed face.
And then the lights went out. The flashing and crashing outside ended as abruptly as it had begun. Silence and darkness stretched on in a deathlike numbness.
“Operations? Operations? What’s going on outside? What happened?”
“Oh, my God, Odegard!” The voice was too shaken for him to identify. “Scratch two slave-units. Odegard that—that damned thing’s reflexes are just too good—“
The watchfire came exploding suddenly into the cave, transformed by the kick of a steel-clawed foot into a hail of sparks and brands that bounced back from the curving wall of stone just opposite the narrow entrance, and became a thousand scattered dying eyes on the cave floor. The berserker would be trying to flush its game, to see if there was a second exit through which the humans could try to run. It must have known that the crippled slave-unit was inside the cave, but by now the berserker’s cold computer brain must have learned contempt for all that the android slaves of Time Operations could do against it. For, once it was satisfied that there was no way for its prey to escape, it tried to walk right in. There came a heavy grating sound; the cave mouth had proved just a bit too narrow for the machine to enter.
“Odegard, we’ve got a dozen arrows ready to drop to your unit now. Shaped charges in the points, set to fire on contact.”
“Arrows’? I said grenades! I told you we’ve got only one bow here, and there’s no room for—“ In mid-sentence Derron realized that the high little window in the rear of the cave might make an excellent archery port. “Send us arrows, then. Send something, quick!”
“We’re dropping the arrows now. Odegard, we have a relief operator standing by in another master-unit, so we can switch if you need relief.”
“Never mind that. I’m used to working this broken-backed thing by now, and he isn’t.”
The berserker was raising a hellish racket, scraping and hammering at the stubborn bulge of rock that was keeping it from its prey. When a signal in his helmet told Derron that the arrows had arrived, he lost no time in using the slave’s hands to open the door in its metal bosom. With a bank of awed faces turned to watch in the gloom, the slave-unit reached into its own metal heart to pull out a dozen shafts, which it then held out to Matt.
From the manner of their appearance it was plain they were no ordinary arrows, and in the present situation there could be no doubt what their purpose must be. Matt delayed only a moment, holding the weapons with reverence, to make a sort of bow to the slave; and then he dashed to the rear of the cave and scrambled up to the window.
That window hole would have provided him with a fine safe spot to shoot from, had the enemy possessed no projective weapons. But since the enemy was laser-armed, it would be the slave-unit’s job to draw fire on itself and keep the berserker as busy as possible.
Hoping devoutly that Matt was an excellent shot, Derron inched his crippled metal body up to the very corner of the L-bend. He could feel the berserker’s blows jarring through the rock he leaned against; he thought that if he reached around the corner he could touch it. Derron waited, looking back into the cave; and when he saw Matt nock the first magic arrow to his bow, he went out around the corner with as quick a movement as he could manage on his hands.
And he nearly fell on his face, for the berserker was out of reach, having just backed away to take a fresh run at the cave entrance. This maneuver made it quicker with its laser than Derron was with his. The slave’s armor glowed, but still held, while Derron scrambled forward, firing back. If the berserker saw Matt in his window it ignored him, thinking arrows meant nothing.
The first one struck the monster on the shoulder of one foreleg, the wooden shaft spinning viciously away while the head vanished in a momentary little fireball. The explosion left a fist-sized hole.
The machine lurched off balance even as its laser flicked toward Matt, and the beam did no more than set fire to the bush atop the little cliff. Derron was still scrambling toward the berserker as best he could, holding his own laser on it like a spotlight, gouging the beam into the shoulder wound. Matt popped up bravely and shot his second arrow as accurately as the first, hitting the berserker square in the side, so the punch of the shaped charge staggered it on its three legs. And then its laser was gone, for Derron had lurched close enough to swing a heavy metal fist and close up the projector-eye for good.
With that, the wrestling match was on again. For a moment Derron thought that this time he had a chance, for the strength of the slave’s two arms more than equaled that of the berserker’s one usable foreleg. But the enemy’s reflexes were still better than human. In a matter of seconds Derron was once more barely hanging on, while the world spun around him. And then again he was thrown.
He grabbed at the legs that trampled him, trying to hang on somehow, to immobilize the berserker as a target. A stamping blow smashed his own laser. What was delaying the arrows?
The berserker was still too big, too strong, too quick, for the crippled slave to handle. Derron clung to one leg, but the other two functional limbs kept on stomping like pile drivers, tearing with their steel claws. There went one of the slave’s useless feet, ripped clean off. The metal man was going to be pulled to pieces. Where were the arrows?
And then the arrows came. Derron had one glimpse of a hurtling human body above him as Matt leaped directly into the fight, brandishing a cluster in each hand. Yelling, seeming to fly like some storm god of legend, he stabbed his bolts against the enemy’s back.
Only a hint of lightning showed outside the berserker’s body. The thunder was all deep inside, an explosion that made both machines bounce. And, with that, the fight was over.
Derron dragged the wrecked and overheated slave-unit shuddering out from under the mass of glowing, twisting, spitting metal that had been the enemy. Then, exhausted, he rested the slave on its elbows. In the wavering glow of the gutted berserker machine, he saw Dart come running from the cave. Tears streaked the boy’s face; in his hand was Matt’s bow, the broken string dangling. And after Dart the rest of The People came running from the cave to gather around something that lay motionless on the ground.
Derron made the slave sit up. Matt lay dead where the enemy’s last convulsion had thrown him. His belly was torn open, his hands charred, his face smashed out of shape—then the eyes opened in that ruined face. Matt’s chest heaved for a shaky breath, and he shuddered and went on breathing.
The women wailed, and some of the men began a kind of slow song. Everyone made way as Derron crawled his battered proxy to Matt’s side and lifted him as gently as he could. Matt was too far gone to wince at a few more minor burns from the touch of the slave’s hot metal.
“Good work, Odegard.” Colonel Borss’s voice had regained strength. “Good work. You’ve wrapped the operation up. We’ll drop you a medikit to use on that fellow; his lifeline could be important.”
“He’s in too bad shape for that, sir. You’ll have to lift him with me.”
“Would like to help, of course, but I’m afraid that’s not in the regulations… .” The colonel’s voice faded in hesitation.
“His lifeline is breaking here, Colonel, no matter what we do. He won it for us, and now his guts are hanging out.”
“Urn. All right, all right. Stand by while we readjust for his mass.”
The People were standing in an awed ring around the slave-unit and its dying burden. The scene would probably be assimilated into one of the historical myths, thought Derron. Perhaps the story of the dying hero and the stone-man would be found some day among the earliest writings of Sirgol. Myths were tough bottles; they could hold many kinds of wine.
Up at the mouth of the cave the oldest woman was having trouble with her tinder as she tried to get the watchfire started again. A young girl who was helping grew impatient, and she grabbed up a dried branch and ran down to the glowing shell of the berserker. From that heat she kindled her brand; waving the flame to keep it bright, she moved back up the hill in a kind of dance.
And then Derron was sitting in a fading circle of light on the dark floor of Operations Stage Three. Two men were running toward him with a stretcher. He opened his metal arms to let the medics take
Matt and then turned his head inside his helmet and found the master power switch with
his teeth.
He let the end-of-mission checklist go hang. In a matter of seconds he had extricated himself from the master-unit and was pushing his way past the first people coming toward him with congratulations. In his sweated leotard he hurried downstairs from the catwalk and made his way through the throng of technicians, operators, medics, and miscellaneous celebrants who were already crowding the floor of the stage. He reached Matt just as the medics were raising the stretcher that held him. Wet cloths had been draped over the wounded man’s protruding intestines, and an intravenous had already been started.
Matt’s eyes were open, though of course they were stupid with shock. To Matt, Derron could be no more than another strange being among many; but Derron was one who walked beside him in human contact, gripping his forearm above his burned hand, until consciousness faded away.
As the stretcher moved toward the hospital, something like a procession gathered behind it. As if a public announcement had been broadcast ahead, the word was spreading that for the first time a man had been brought up from the deep past. When they brought Matt into the emergency room it was only natural that Lisa, like everyone else in the hospital who had the chance, should come hurrying to see him.
“He’s lost,” she murmured, looking down at the swollen face, the eyelids now and then flickering open. “Oh, so lost and alone. I know the feeling.” She turned anxiously to a doctor. “He’ll live now, won’t he? He’s going to be all right?”
The doctor smiled faintly. “If they’re breathing when we get ‘em this far, we usually save ‘em.”
Trustingly Lisa sighed in immediate deep relief. Her concern for the stranger was natural and kind.
“Hello, Derron.” She smiled at him briefly, before going to hover over the stretcher as closely as she could. Her voice and manner had been absent, as if she hardly noticed him at all.
Brother Assassin Page 5