<h2>XII.</h2>
<p>Further reading of the log produced
no new evidence. There was a
good deal more information about
the early animal and plant life and
how deadly they were, as well as the
first defenses against them. Interesting
historically, but of no use whatsoever
in countering the menace. The
captain apparently never thought that
life forms were altering on Pyrrus,
believing instead that dangerous
beasts were being discovered. He
never lived to change his mind. The
last entry in the log, less than two
months after the first attack, was
very brief. And in a different handwriting.</p>
<div class="bq"><p><i>Captain Kurkowski died today, of
poisoning following an insect bite.
His death is greatly mourned.</i></p>
</div>
<p>The "why" of the planetary revulsion
had yet to be uncovered.</p>
<p>"Kerk must see this book," Jason
said. "He should have some idea of
the progress being made. Can we get
transportation—or do we walk to
city hall?"</p>
<p>"Walk, of course," Meta said.</p>
<p>"Then you bring the book. At
two G's I find it very hard to be a
gentleman and carry the packages."</p>
<p>They had just entered Kerk's outer
office when a shrill screaming burst
out of the phone-screen. It took Jason
a moment to realize that it was
a mechanical signal, not a human
voice.</p>
<p>"What is it?" he asked.</p>
<p>Kerk burst through the door and
headed for the street entrance. Everyone
else in the office was going the
same way. Meta looked confused,
leaning towards the door, then looking
back at Jason.</p>
<p>"What does it mean? Can't you
tell me?" He shook her arm.</p>
<p>"Sector alarm. A major breakthrough
of some kind at the perimeter.
Everyone but other perimeter
guards has to answer."</p>
<p>"Well, go then," he said. "Don't
worry about me. I'll be all right."</p>
<p>His words acted like a trigger release.
Meta's gun was in her hand
and she was gone before he had
finished speaking. Jason sat down
wearily in the deserted office.</p>
<p>The unnatural silence in the building
began to get on his nerves. He
shifted his chair over to the phone-screen
and switched it on to <i>receive</i>.
The screen exploded with color and
sound. At first Jason could make no
sense of it at all. Just a confused
jumble of faces and voices. It was a
multi-channel set designed for military
use. A number of images were
carried on the screen at one time,
rows of heads or hazy backgrounds
where the user had left the field of
view. Many of the heads were talking
at the same time and the babble of
their voices made no sense whatsoever.</p>
<p>After examining the controls and
making a few experiments, Jason
began to understand the operation.
Though all stations were on the
screen at all times, their audio channels
could be controlled. In that way
two, three or more stations could be
hooked together in a link-up. They
would be in round-robin communication
with each other, yet never out of
contact with the other stations.</p>
<p>Identification between voice and
sound was automatic. Whenever one
of the pictured images spoke, the
image would glow red. By trial and
error Jason brought in the audio for
the stations he wanted and tried to
follow the course of the attack.</p>
<p>Very quickly he realized this was
something out of the ordinary. In
some way, no one made it clear, a
section of the perimeter had been
broken through and emergency defenses
had to be thrown up to encapsulate
it. Kerk seemed to be in
charge, at least he was the only one
with an override transmitter. He used
it for general commands. The many,
tiny images faded and his face appeared
on top of them, filling the
entire screen.</p>
<p>"All perimeter stations send twenty-five
per cent of your complement
to Area Twelve."</p>
<p>The small images reappeared and
the babble increased, red lights flickering
from face to face.</p>
<p>"... Abandon the first floor, acid
bombs can't reach."</p>
<p>"If we hold we'll be cut off, but
salient is past us on the west flank.
Request support."</p>
<p>"DON'T MERVV ... IT'S USELESS!"</p>
<p>"... And the napalm tanks are
almost gone. Orders?"</p>
<p>"The truck is still there, get it to
the supply warehouse, you'll find replacements ..."</p>
<hr />
<p>Out of the welter of talk, only the
last two fragments made any sense.
Jason had noticed the signs below
when he came in. The first two floors
of the building below him were jammed
with military supplies. This was
his chance to get into the act.</p>
<p>Just sitting and watching was frustrating.
Particularly when it was a
desperate emergency. He didn't overvalue
his worth, but he was sure there
was always room for another gun.</p>
<p>By the time he had dragged himself
down to the street level a turbo-truck
had slammed to a stop in front
of the loading platform. Two Pyrrans
were rolling out drums of napalm
with reckless disregard for their
own safety. Jason didn't dare enter
that maelstrom of rolling metal. He
found he could be of use tugging the
heavy drums into position on the
truck while the others rolled them
up. They accepted his aid without
acknowledgment.</p>
<p>It was exhausting, sweaty work,
hauling the leaden drums into
place against the heavy gravity. After
a minute Jason worked by touch
through a red haze of hammering
blood. He realized the job was done
only when the truck suddenly leaped
forward and he was thrown to the
floor. He lay there, his chest heaving.
As the driver hurled the heavy vehicle
along, all Jason could do was
bounce around in the bottom. He
could see well enough, but was still
gasping for breath when they braked
at the fighting zone.</p>
<p>To Jason, it was a scene of incredible
confusion. Guns firing, flames,
men and women running on all sides.
The napalm drums were unloaded
without his help and the truck vanished
for more. Jason leaned against
a wall of a half-destroyed building
and tried to get his bearings. It was
impossible. There seemed to be a
great number of small animals: he
killed two that attacked him. Other
than that he couldn't determine the
nature of the battle.</p>
<p>A Pyrran, tan face white with pain
and exertion, stumbled up. His right
arm, wet with raw flesh and dripping
blood, hung limply at his side. It was
covered with freshly applied surgical
foam. He held his gun in his left
hand, a stump of control cable dangling
from it. Jason thought the man
was looking for medical aid. He
couldn't have been more wrong.</p>
<p>Clenching the gun in his teeth, the
Pyrran clutched a barrel of napalm
with his good hand and hurled it
over on its side. Then, with the gun
once more in his hand, he began to
roll the drum along the ground with
his feet. It was slow, cumbersome
work, but he was still in the fight.</p>
<p>Jason pushed through the hurrying
crowd and bent over the drum. "Let
me do it," he said. "You can cover
us both with your gun."</p>
<p>The man wiped the sweat from
his eyes with the back of his arm
and blinked at Jason. He seemed to
recognize him. When he smiled it
was a grimace of pain, empty of
humor. "Do that. I can still shoot.
Two half men—maybe we equal one
whole." Jason was laboring too hard
to even notice the insult.</p>
<hr />
<p>An explosion had blasted a raw pit
in the street ahead. Two people were
at the bottom, digging it even deeper
with shovels. The whole thing seemed
meaningless. Just as Jason and the
wounded man rolled up the drum
the diggers leaped out of the excavation
and began shooting down into
its depths. One of them turned, a
young girl, barely in her teens.</p>
<p>"Praise Perimeter!" she breathed.
"They found the napalm. One of the
new horrors is breaking through towards
Thirteen, we just found it."
Even as she talked she swiveled the
drum around, kicked the easy-off
plug, and began dumping the gelid
contents into the hole. When half of
it had gurgled down, she kicked the
drum itself in. Her companion pulled
a flare from his belt, lit it, and threw
it after the drum.</p>
<div class="figright"><ANTIMG src="images/010.png" width-obs="161" height-obs="500" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>"Back quick. They don't like
heat," he said.</p>
<p>This was putting it very mildly.
The napalm caught, tongues of flame
and roiling, greasy smoke climbed up
to the sky. Under Jason's feet the
earth shifted and moved. <i>Something</i>
black and long stirred in the heart
of the flame, then arched up into the
sky over their heads. In the midst
of the searing heat it still moved with
alien, jolting motions. It was immense,
at least two meters thick and
with no indication of its length. The
flames didn't stop it at all, just annoyed
it.</p>
<p>Jason had some idea of the thing's
length as the street cracked and buckled
for fifty meters on each side
of the pit. Great loops of the creature
began to emerge from the ground.
He fired his gun, as did the others.
Not that it seemed to have any effect.
More and more people were appearing,
armed with a variety of weapons.
Flame-throwers and grenades seemed
to be the most effective.</p>
<p>"<i>Clear the area ... we're going to
saturate it. Fall back.</i>"</p>
<p>The voice was so loud it jarred
Jason's ear. He turned and recognized
Kerk, who had arrived with truckloads
of equipment. He had a power
speaker on his back, the mike hung
in front of his lips. His amplified
voice brought an instant reaction
from the crowd. They began to move.</p>
<p>There was still doubt in Jason's
mind what to do. Clear the area?
But what area? He started towards
Kerk, before he realized that the rest
of the Pyrrans were going in the
opposite direction. Even under two
gravities they <i>moved</i>.</p>
<p>Jason had a naked feeling of being
alone on the stage. He was in the
center of the street, and the others
had vanished. No one remained. Except
the wounded man Jason had
helped. He stumbled towards Jason,
waving his good arm. Jason couldn't
understand what he said. Kerk was
shouting orders again from one of
the trucks. They had started to move
too. The urgency struck home and
Jason started to run.</p>
<p>It was too late. On all sides the
earth was buckling, cracking, as more
loops of the underground thing
forced its way into the light. Safety
lay ahead. Only in front of it rose
an arch of dirt-encrusted gray.</p>
<hr />
<p>There are seconds of time that
seem to last an eternity. A moment
of subjective time that is grabbed and
stretched to an infinite distance. This
was one of those moments. Jason
stood, frozen. Even the smoke in the
sky hung unmoving. The high-standing
loop of alien life was before him,
every detail piercingly clear.</p>
<p>Thick as a man, ribbed and gray
as old bark. Tendrils projected from
all parts of it, pallid and twisting
lengths that writhed slowly with
snakelike life. Shaped like a plant,
yet with the motions of an animal.
And cracking, splitting. This was the
worst.</p>
<p>Seams and openings appeared.
Splintering, gaping mouths that
vomited out a horde of pallid animals.
Jason heard their shriekings,
shrill yet remote. He saw the needlelike
teeth that lined their jaws.</p>
<p>The paralysis of the unknown held
him there. He should have died.
Kerk was thundering at him through
the power speaker, others were firing
into the attacking creature. Jason
knew nothing.</p>
<p>Then he was shot forward, pushed
by a rock-hard shoulder. The wounded
man was still there, trying to get
Jason clear. Gun clenched in his jaws
he dragged Jason along with his good
arm. Towards the creature. The
others stopped firing. They saw his
plan and it was a good one.</p>
<p>A loop of the thing arched into
the air, leaving an opening between
its body and the ground. The
wounded Pyrran planted his feet and
tightened his muscles. One-handed,
with a single thrust, he picked Jason
off the ground and sent him hurtling
under the living arch. Moving tendrils
brushed fire along his face, then
he was through, rolling over and
over on the ground. The wounded
Pyrran leaped after him.</p>
<p>It was too late. There had been a
chance for one person to get out. The
Pyrran could have done it easily—instead
he had pushed Jason first.
The thing was aware of movement
when Jason brushed its tendrils. It
dropped and caught the wounded
man under its weight. He vanished
from sight as the tendrils wrapped
around him and the animals swarmed
over. His trigger must have pulled
back to full automatic because the
gun kept firing a long time after he
should have been dead.</p>
<p>Jason crawled. Some of the fanged
animals ran towards him, but were
shot. He knew nothing about this.
Then rude hands grabbed him up and
pulled him forward. He slammed
into the side of a truck and Kerk's
face was in front of his, flushed and
angry. One of the giant fists closed
on the front of Jason's clothes and
he was lifted off his feet, shaken
like a limp bag of rags. He offered
no protest and could not have even
if Kerk had killed him.</p>
<p>When he was thrown to the
ground, someone picked him up and
slid him into the back of the truck.
He did not lose consciousness as the
truck bounced away, yet he could not
move. In a moment the fatigue would
go away and he would sit up. That
was all he was, just a little tired.
Even as he thought this he passed
out.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
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