<h2>10</h2>
<p>"Beyond this—" Menlik worked his way to the very lip of a drop, raising
a finger cautiously—"beyond this we do not go."</p>
<p>"But you say that the camp of your people lies well out in the plains—"
Jil-Lee was up on one knee, using the field glasses they had brought
from the stores of the wrecked ship. He passed them along to Travis.
There was nothing to be sighted but the rippling amber waves of the tall
grasses, save for an occasional break of a copse of trees near the
foothills.</p>
<p>They had reached this point in the early morning, threading through the
pass, making their way across the section known to the outlaws. From
here they could survey the debatable land where their temporary allies
insisted the Reds were in full control.</p>
<p>The result of the conference in the south had been this uneasy alliance.
From the start Travis realized that he could not hope to commit the clan
to any set plan, that even to get this scouting party to come against
the stubborn resistance of Deklay and his reactionaries was a major
achievement. There was now an opening wedge of six Apaches in the
north.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Beyond this," Menlik repeated, "they keep watch and can control us with
the caller."</p>
<p>"What do you think?" Travis passed the glasses to Nolan.</p>
<p>If they were ever to develop a war chief, this lean man, tall for an
Apache and slow to speak, might fill that role. He adjusted the lenses
and began a detailed study-sweep of the open territory. Then he
stiffened; his mouth, below the masking of the glasses, was tight.</p>
<p>"What is it?" Jil-Lee asked.</p>
<p>"Riders—two ... four ... five.... Also something else—in the air."</p>
<p>Menlik jerked back and grabbed at Nolan's arm, dragging him down by the
weight of his body.</p>
<p>"The flyer! Come back—back!" He was still pulling at Nolan, prodding at
Travis with one foot, and the Apaches stared at him with amazement.</p>
<p>The shaman sputtered in his own language, and then, visibly regaining
command of himself, spoke English once more.</p>
<p>"Those are hunters, and they carry a caller. Either some others have
escaped or they are determined to find our mountain camp."</p>
<p>Jil-Lee looked at Travis. "You did not feel anything when the woman was
under that spell?"</p>
<p>Travis shook his head. Jil-Lee nodded and then said to the shaman: "We
shall stay here and watch. But since it is bad for you—do you go. And
we shall meet you near this place of the towers. Agreed?"</p>
<p>For a moment Menlik's face held a shadowy expression Travis tried to
read. Was it resentment—resentment that he was forced to retreat when
the others could stand<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span> their ground? Did the Tatar believe that he lost
face this way? But the shaman gave a grunt of what they took as assent
and slipped over the edge of the lookout point. A moment later they
heard him speaking the Mongol tongue, warning Hulagur and Lotchu, his
companions on the scout. Then came the clatter of pony hoofs as they
rode their mounts away.</p>
<p>The Apaches settled back in the cup, which gave them a wide view over
the plains. Soon it was not necessary to use the glasses in order to
sight the advancing party of hunters—five riders, four wearing Tatar
dress. The fifth had such an odd outline that Travis was reminded of
Menlik's sketch of the alien. Under the sharper vision of the glasses he
saw that the rider was equipped with a pack strapped between his
shoulders and a bulbous helmet covering most of his head. Highly
specialized equipment for communication, Travis guessed.</p>
<p>"That is a 'copter up above," Nolan said. "Different shape from ours."</p>
<p>They had been familiar with helicopters back on Terra. Ranchers used
them for range inspection, and all of the Apache volunteers had flown in
them. But Nolan was correct; this one possessed several unfamiliar
features.</p>
<p>"The Tatars say they don't bring those very far into the mountains,"
Jil-Lee mused. "That could explain their man on horseback; he gets in
where they don't fly."</p>
<p>Nolan fingered his bow. "If these Reds depend upon their machine to
control what they seek, then they may be taken by surprise——"</p>
<p>"But not yet!" Travis spoke sharply. Nolan frowned at him.</p>
<p>Jil-Lee chuckled. "The way is not so dark for us,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span> younger brother, that
we need your torch held for our feet!"</p>
<p>Travis swallowed back any retort, accepting the fairness of that rebuke.
He had no right to believe that he alone knew the best way of handling
the enemy. Biting on the sourness of that realization, he lay quietly
with the others, watching the riders enter the foothills perhaps a
quarter of a mile to the west.</p>
<p>The helicopter was circling now over the men riding into a cut between
two rises. When they were lost to view, the pilot made wider casts, and
Travis thought the flyer's crew were probably in communication with the
helmeted one of the quintet on the ground.</p>
<p>He stirred. "They are heading for the Tatar camp, just as if they know
exactly where it is—"</p>
<p>"That also may be true," Nolan replied. "What do we know of these
Tatars? They have freely said that the Reds can hold them in mind ropes
when they wish. Already they may be so bound. I say—let us go back to
our own country." He added to the decisiveness of that by handing
Jil-Lee the glasses and sliding down from their perch.</p>
<p>Travis looked at the other. In a way he could understand the wisdom of
Nolan's suggestion. But he was sure that withdrawal now would only
postpone trouble. Sooner or later the Apaches would have to stand
against the Reds, and if they could do it now while the enemy was
occupied with trouble from the Tatars, so much the better.</p>
<p>Jil-Lee was following Nolan. But something in Travis rebelled. He
watched the circling helicopter. If it was overhanging the action area
of the horsemen, they had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span> either reined in or were searching a
relatively small section of the foothills.</p>
<p>Reluctantly Travis descended to the hollow where Jil-Lee stood with
Nolan. Tsoay and Lupe and Rope were a little to one side as if the final
orders would come from their seniors.</p>
<p>"It would be well," Jil-Lee said slowly, "if we saw what weapons they
have. I want a closer look at the equipment of that one in the helmet.
Also," he smiled straight at Nolan—"I do not think that they can detect
the presence of warriors of the People unless we will it so."</p>
<p>Nolan ran a finger along the curve of his bow, shot a measuring glance
right and left at the general contours of the country.</p>
<p>"There is wisdom in what you say, elder brother. Only this is a trail we
shall take alone, not allowing the men with fur hats to know where we
walk." He looked pointedly in Travis' direction.</p>
<p>"That is wisdom, <i>Ba'is'a</i>," Travis promptly replied, giving Nolan the
old title accorded the leader of a war party. Travis was grateful for
that much of a concession.</p>
<p>They swung into action, heading southeast at an angle which should bring
them across the track of the enemy hunting party. The path was theirs at
last, only moments after the passing of their quarry. None of the five
riders was taking any precautions to cover his trail. Each moved with
the confidence of one not having to fear any attack.</p>
<p>From cover the Apaches looked aloft. They could hear the faint hum of
the helicopter. It was still circling, Tsoay reported from a higher
check point, but those circles remained close over the plains area—the
riders had already passed beyond the limits of that aerial sentry.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Three to a side, the Apaches advanced with the trail between them. They
were carefully hidden when they caught up with the hunters. The four
Tatars were grouped together; the fifth man, heavily burdened by his
pack, had climbed from the saddle and was sitting on the ground, his
hands busy with a flat plate which covered him from upper chest to belt.</p>
<p>Now that he had a chance to see them closely, Travis noted the lack of
expression on the broad Tatar faces. The four men were blank of eye,
astride their mounts with no apparent awareness of their present
surroundings. Then as one, their heads swung around to the helmeted
leader before they dismounted and stood motionless for a long moment in
a way which reminded Travis of the coyotes' attitude when they
endeavored to pass some message to him. But these men even lacked the
signs of thinking intelligence the animals had.</p>
<p>The helmeted man's hand moved across his chest plate, and instantly his
followers came into a measure of life. One put his hand to his forehead
with an odd, half-dazed gesture. Another half crouched, his lips
wrinkling back in a snarl. And the leader, watching him, laughed. Then
he snapped an order, his hand poised over his control plate.</p>
<p>One of the four took the horse reins, made the mounts fast to near-by
bushes. Then as one they began to walk forward, the Red bringing up the
rear several paces behind the nearest Tatar. They were going upslope to
the crest of a small ridge.</p>
<p>The Tatar who first reached the crest put his hands to cup his mouth,
sent a ringing cry southward, and the faint "hu-hu-hu" echoed on and on
through the hills.</p>
<p>Either Menlik had reached the camp in time, or his people were not to be
so easily enticed. For though the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span> hunters waited for a long time, there
was no answer to that hail. At last the helmeted man called his
captives, bringing them sullenly down to mount and ride again—a move
which suited the Apaches.</p>
<p>They could not tell how close was the communication between the rider
and the helicopter. And they were still too near the plains to attack
unless it was necessary for their own protection. Travis dropped back to
join Nolan.</p>
<p>"He controls them by that plate on his chest," he said. "If we would
take them, we must get at that—"</p>
<p>"These Tatars use lariats in fighting. Did they not rope you as a calf
is roped for branding? Then why do they not so take this Red, binding
his arms to his sides?" The suspicion in Nolan's voice was plain.</p>
<p>"Perhaps in them is some conditioned control making it so that they
cannot attack their rulers—"</p>
<p>"I do not like this matter of machines which can play this way and that
with minds and bodies!" flared Nolan. "A man should only <i>use</i> a weapon,
not be one!"</p>
<p>Travis could agree to that. Had they by the wreck of their own ship and
the death of Ruthven, escaped just such an existence as these Tatars now
endured? If so, why? He and all the Apaches were volunteers, eager and
willing to form new world colonies. What had happened back on Terra that
they had been so ruthlessly sent out without warning and under Redax?
Another small piece of that puzzle, or maybe the heart of the whole
picture snapped into place. Had the project learned in some way of the
Tatar settlement on Topaz and so been forced to speed up that
translation from late twentieth-century Americans to primitives? That
would explain a lot!</p>
<p>Travis returned abruptly to the matter now at hand as he saw a peak
ahead. The party they were trailing was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span> heading directly for the outlaw
hide-out. Travis hoped Menlik had warned them in time. There—that wall
of cliff to his left must shelter the valley of the towers, though it
was still miles ahead. Travis did not believe the hunters would be able
to reach their goal unless they traveled at night. They might not know
of the ape-things which could menace the dark.</p>
<p>But the enemy, whether he knew of such dangers or not, did not intend to
press on. As the sun pulled away, leaving crevices and crannies shadow
dark, the hunters stopped to make camp. The Apaches, after their custom
on the war trail, gathered on the heights above.</p>
<p>"This Red seems to think that he shall find those he seeks sitting
waiting for him, as if their feet were nipped tight in a trap," Tsoay
remarked.</p>
<p>"It is the habit of the Pinda-lick-o-yi," Lupe added, "to believe they
are greater than all others. Yet this one is a stupid fool walking into
the arms of a she-bear with a cub." He chuckled.</p>
<p>"A man with a rifle does not fear a man armed only with a stick," Travis
cut in quickly. "This one is armed with a weapon which he has good
reason to believe makes him invulnerable to attack. If he rests tonight,
he probably leaves his machine on guard."</p>
<p>"At least we are sure of one thing," Nolan said in half agreement. "This
one does not suspect that there are any in these hills save those he can
master. And his machine does not work against us. Thus at dawn—" He
made a swift gesture, and they smiled in concert.</p>
<p>At dawn—the old time of attack. An Apache does not attack at night.
Travis was not sure that any of them could break that old taboo and
creep down upon the camp before the coming of new light.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>But tomorrow morning they would take over this confident Red, strip him
of his enslaving machine.</p>
<p>Travis' head jerked. It had come as suddenly as a blow between his
eyes—to half stun him. What ... what was it? Not any physical
impact—no, something which was dazing but still immaterial. He braced
his whole body, awaiting its return, trying frantically to understand
what had happened in that instant of vertigo and seeming disembodiment.
Never had he experienced anything like it—or had he? Two years or more
ago when he had gone through the time transfer to enter the Arizona of
the Folsom Men some ten thousand years earlier—that moment of transfer
had been something like this, a sensation of being awry in space and
time with no stable footing to be found.</p>
<p>Yet he was lying here on very tangible rock and soil, and nothing about
him in the shadow-hung landscape of Topaz had changed in the slightest.
But that blow had left behind it a quivering residue of panic buried far
inside him, a tender spot like an open wound.</p>
<p>Travis drew a deep breath which was almost a sob, levered himself up on
one elbow to stare intently down into the enemy camp. Was this some
attack from the other's unknown weapon? Suddenly he was not at all sure
what might happen when the Apaches made that dawn rush.</p>
<p>Jil-Lee was in station on his right. Travis must compare notes with him
to be sure that this was not indeed a trap. Better to retreat now than
to be taken like fish in a net. He crept out of his place, gave the
chittering signal call of the fluff-ball, and heard Jil-Lee's answer in
a cleverly mimicked trill of a night insect.</p>
<p>"Did you feel something just now—in your head?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span> Travis found it
difficult to put that sensation into words.</p>
<p>"Not so. But you did?"</p>
<p>He had—of course, he had! The remains of it were still in him, that
point of panic. "Yes."</p>
<p>"The machine?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." Travis' confusion grew. It might be that he alone of the
party had been struck. If so, he could be a danger to his own kind.</p>
<p>"This is not good. I think we had better hold council, away from here."
Jil-Lee's whisper was the merest ghost of sound. He chirped again to be
answered from Tsoay upslope, who passed on the signal.</p>
<p>The first moon was high in the sky as the Apaches gathered together.
Again Travis asked his question: Had any of the others felt that odd
blow? He was met by negatives.</p>
<p>But Nolan had the final word: "This is not good," he echoed Jil-Lee's
comment. "If it was the Red machine at work, then we may all be swept
into his net along with those he seeks. Perhaps the longer one remains
close to that thing, the more influence it gains over him. We shall stay
here until dawn. If the enemy would reach the place they seek, then they
must pass below us, for that is the easiest road. Burdened with his
machine, that Red has ever taken the easiest way. So, we shall see if he
also has a defense against these when they come without warning." He
touched the arrows in his quiver.</p>
<p>To kill from ambush meant that they might never learn the secret of the
machine, but after his experience Travis was willing to admit that
Nolan's caution was the wise way. Travis wanted no part of a second
attack like that which had shaken him so. And Nolan had not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span> ordered a
general retreat. It must be in the war chief's thoughts as it was in
Travis' that if the machine could have an influence over Apaches, it
must cease to function.</p>
<p>They set their ambush with the age-old skill the Redax had grafted into
their memories. Then there was nothing to do but wait.</p>
<p>It was an hour after dawn when Tsoay signaled that the enemy was coming,
and shortly after, they heard the thud of ponies' hoofs. The first Tatar
plodded into view, and by the stance of his body in the saddle, Travis
knew the Red had him under full control. Two, then three Tatars passed
between the teeth of the Apache trap. The fourth one had allowed a wider
gap to open between himself and his fellows.</p>
<p>Then the Red leader came. His face below the bulge of the helmet was not
happy. Travis believed the man was not a horseman by inclination. The
Apache set arrow to bow cord, and at the chirp from Nolan, fired in
concert with his clansmen.</p>
<p>Only one of those arrows found a target. The Red's pony gave a shrill
scream of pain and terror, reared, pawing at the air, toppled back,
pinning its shouting rider under it.</p>
<p>The Red had had a defense right enough, one which had somehow deflected
the arrows. But he neither had protection against his own awkward seat
in the saddle nor the arrow which had seriously wounded the now
threshing pony.</p>
<p>Ahead the Tatars twisted and writhed, mouthed tortured cries, then
dropped out of their saddles to lie limply on the ground as if the
arrows aimed at the master had instead struck each to the heart.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr />
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